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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-10-29
Weekly Artisan; 1910-10-29
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and ,.~ I \ '--', I'; )
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GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.• OCTOBER 29. 1910
BEAUTIFUL BIRD'S EYE MAPLE
Just the Thing to Delight the Ladies at Christmas!
There is nothing quite so dainty-so feminine-so charming for Christ-mas,
as a Bird's Eye Maple Dressing Table.
Light, airy and cheerful, it goes to the hearts of the ladies, and it is the
only light-colored furniture that
is also highly artistic.
The Northern has made Maple
a leading line ever since starting in
business. Weare in the heart of the
Maple country, where the finestMaple
in the world grows, and with our
standard lines, using Maple as a base,
we are able to pick only the choic-est
pieces for Natural Maple finishes.
Therefore, when you buy Natural
Bird's Eye Maple fromthe Northern,
you are sure of the creme de la creme
-the finest in the country.
But you must have artistic shapes
too-the airy beauty of Bird's Eye
Maple is completely lost if it is not
made up in beautiful designs.
We also give you moderate prices.
That is what will sell with you-beautiful
wood, deslgns and workmanship, at moderate prices, coupled with prompt deJivery (and that means every-thing
when you get near Chnstmas-nobody beat3 us at that part of the game).
No. 1197 Dressing Table.
Made in Oak, Mahogany and Bird',
Eye Maple.
No. 1152 Dresser.
Made JD Oak, Mahogany and Blrd',-eye Maple.
Full information given in courteous letters about anything that interests you. Write us frankly, freely.
NORTHERN FURNITURE COMPANY
SHEBOYGAN, WISCONSIN
SeeciaJists fQ tneFurniture Trade.
MICHIGAN ENGRAVING CO.GRANDRAPIDS.
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NEW DESIGNS Ir~ LOUIS XVI STYLE -- I __ - • __
No. 1711 No. 1705-1705
WRITE FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES.
GRAND RAPIDS BRASS COMPANY
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN ..... .. _. - . - --- _. -- .. ....I
WEEKLY ARTISAN 1
YOU CAN
MAil YOUR CATALOG
NOVEMBER 20th
If you place the
order with us now.
WHITE
PRINTING COMPANY
GRANDRAPIDS, MIC".
I PRINTERS FOR THE FURNITURE TRADE. I
2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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LUCE FURNITURE COMPANY I
II
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
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I Manufacturers of COMPLETE lines of MEDIUM PRICED DINING
and CHAMBER FURNITURE.
Catalogues .~. ---------_- _. .-t-o_- De-ale-rs-O-nly-. --_._----._--_._- _. ---_._._._- ---------- -- --- -_ .._. - .--~ . -- .
Luce-Redmond Chair Co.,Ltd. I
BIG RAPIDS, MICH.
High Grade Office Chairs
Dining Chairs
Odd Rockers and Chairs
Desk and Dresser Chairs
Slipper Rockers
Colonial Parlor Suites
In
Dark and Tuna Mahogany
Btrd' J Ey Maplf
Btrch
!Zuartfred Oak
and
CtrcaJJtan Walnut
Our Exhibit you will find on the
fourth floor, East Section, MANUfACTURERS'BUILDING,North Ionia Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
Exhibit in charge of J. C. HAMILTON, C. E. COHOES,J. EDGAR FOSTER.
PUBLIC LIlllLtHr
31st Year-No. 18 GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., OCTOBER 29,1910 Issued Weekly
FOREIGN MARKETS FOR METAL BEDSTEADS
Consuls Urge Anlerican Manufacturers to Compete With Those of
England and Germany.
The nl11eau of J\Ianufactllre" at \\ ashmgton hd\lI1g lC-quested
consuls at \ allOUS pomts, to fl11msh mf01matlOn as to
the tl dde m metal beds, \'V lth partlculars as to the source of
supply, local faLt01les, pnce", ctc , hdS 1ecen ed repm ts which,
when "bOlled dm\ n" read a" follows
Consul John E Kehl of Sydney, ~ma Scotla-Gp to the
latter pal t of 1907 only \mellcan made brass beds were sold
m S) dney, but the Canad1an manufacturers ha\ e smce then
captured the tlade by reduung their pi Ices, by offe1mg b1ass
beds of Amencan des1gn, and by uSIng best Fnghsh lacque1,
cla1med to be supellor to Amcncan varmsh. Canad1an-made
",h1te enameled bed", w1th b1ass caps and rods, headp1ece 57
inches high, foot 42 mches, 3-16 mch 1al1mg, and 1 1-16 inch
p1lla1 ", 1eta11 at $3 60 B1a"s beds, w1th 2-mch post", cap tops,
5S mches h1gh, finished \\ lth S-ply Enghsh golden lacquel,
1 eta1l at $18
1 he poss1b1l1ty of openmg \mellcan tl ade 1ela t10ns with
Cape Breton depends on the ab111ty to compete in p11ce and
quahty w1th the Canad1an-made a1tlcle Therc 1S no local
prejudice agamst artlcles of Amencan manufactul e, 1£ any-thmg,
there 1S a preference It 1S suggested that \'. hen corre-spondmg
w1th thc firms'" hosc addresses are herewith trans-m1tted
net and gross we1ghts be given, also CUb1Cmeasure-ment
of the bed Clated for sh1ppmg (Address on file m the
Bureau of Manufactures)
Consul -:\lanon Letcher, '\capulco, :YI:exico- The iron bed-steads
"old hel e a1e of ::\le"lCan mannfactl11 e They are ap-parently
of cheap constrnctlOn and mfellor quahty. The re-tall
pnce of smgle beds 1S $10 gold and of double beds $15.
There seems to be no 1eason why Amencan bedsteads can
not be placed on tl11s md1ket. I have seen nowhere m MeXICO
11on bedsteads", hlch compare with those 01dmanly reta1led
m Amellcan stOles "\n Amencan bed, howeve1, 1S ra1ely
seen, tl11s trade bem£; con trolled by Gel man and Enghsh
mannfactm el s .l\Iost Enghsh, F1 ench, and German honses
ale wcll 1eplesented m the .!\le:\.lcan mal Kets, and thlS lS a
factor of great conseqncnce in dete1111m1112;v\hC1e ilade \\ 111
go. Amc11can expOJ tel s depend too much on catalogues
Me1chants do not feel that any gualantlc" stand behmd the11
purchases through catalogues, and pi efe1 to buy fl om houses
represented b) "drummers" Thel c 1'0 not a large dcmand
hel e for 1ron bed" The ~cnel al people, Without exccptlOn,
use cob of the double X ty pe of lon" tl uctlOn, as these a1e
cheap, cool, and suffiClentl.' comfOl table Ilon beds al e con-sidered
luxune" f01 the nch. (The names of the leadmg
wholesale houses 1n '\capulco are on file m the Bureau of
-:\lanufactures )
Consul Leo J Keena, Chlhnahna, Mex1co-There is one
fact01Y in Ch1hnahua mannfactnring blass and 110n beds of
the cheaper grades. The high-grade brass beds on sale here
are Imported from the Ul11ted States. Th1s class of beds was
formedy 1mported from England, bnt dl11mg the past few
)ea1S all hu;h-pllced b1ass and ilOn beds have been purchased
m the Umted State" The cheap blass and 1ron beds of local
mannfacture ale les" accl11ately made than the same class of
\mencan beds, and the fimsh 1'0also mfen01 The names of
the tl11ee largest dealel s m fl11l11tnre m th1s d1strict al e trans-m1tted
(and filed m the Bl11ean of Manufactures). One of
these dealel s mf01 med me that he conld not import iron or
chcap brass beds to sell agamst those made in Chihuahua,
althovgh all the mOle expensl\e beds he handles are of Amen·
can manufactul e. The second firm listed reported that for
more than a year they had 1mpOlted all the11 brass and iron
beds from the Umted States, and had found that they could
glve a customer bette1 value f01 the same price on the 11n-ported
beds than they could on the local product because of
the better w01kmanslllp and hmsh of the former.
Consul R E Holaday, Santiago, Cuba-Brass and 110n
bedsteads ale Imported flom both the Umted States and Eng-land.
\Voven vv11e and steel sprmg s are manufactured here
flom matellal 1mpo1ted from England and Germany. None
of the stores handle metalhc couches. Vlooden foldmg chalrs
of Amencan manufacture a1e on sale in most of the stores,
but the dealers say there 1S very httle demand for them, ex-cept
to rent on speClal occaSlOns. Vessels of the New YOlk
and Cnba 11a11 Steamsh1p Company, P1el 14, East Rivcr, pi)
1 egulady bet", een th1S pm t and New York, and vessels of
the 1\lnnson Steamsh1p Lme, 82-92 Beavel sticet, "New York,
ply lef.;ulal1) betvvecn tIllS pOlt and Mol)]le.
Consul T{alph J. Totten, l\la1acalbo, Vcne7uela-Bolh
metal and \\ ooden bedsteads al e in use m th1S d1strict, the
metdl bemg 11npOlted fl om (rel many clllefly and thc '" ooden
bemg manufactured m Maraca1bo, flom native wood. A local
factory has a monthly productlOn of about 50 wooden beds
and 100 cots wlth wood frames and canvas tops. The average
bed of thlS class retalls fOl fl om $4 to $12 50. Some of the
Your Continued Success Depends
on the QUALITYof Your Goods-
4 WEEKLY ARTISAN
It's after a bed or chair or table leaves your store that it counts for or against your
future trade, Every Stow & Davis table you sell is a constant advertisement
of your reliability, Our tables resist wear-quality is built in, along with the
style and hand rubbed finIsh that make our designs so attractive.
Our new catalog, showing some of the handsomest Colonial and Flanders
dmers ever bUilt.is m press. You will just naturally want these top-nolchers in
your own store, for your best trade. Send in your name for an early copy.
STOW & DAVIS FURNITURE COMPANY,
PERFECTION TABLE TOPS. DINERS.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
OFFICE AND BANK TABLES.
local cabinetmakel s turn out a fel,l, hlghh 01 namental cedal
and mahogany bed'i of the old ia~hlC)ned fOUl-po':>tel t\ pe
whICh arc ~old at pllce" lan[,1J1c, t!om S2; to S7; alcOld1J1!?, tll
elaboratene~~ of de~H~n rj he mclJ()JIt\ of the bed"tead" ~old
here, lHlY\e\ el, a1 e Il on 11,l111e"\\ 1th \\ III "pl111g~ 1he mCht
populal ~tyle 1~ of meclll1111-"I/ccl 11 on tub1J1c" pamtul 'll1d
ornamented 111J)ll!?,ht COlOl~, \\ 1th the lO! nel pO'ib e"tendmg
about 5 feet abo\ e the hed to ",UppOit a doth canopy to \\ h1ch
the mosqUIto net may be fastened PI actlcalh all metal beds
are bought fl om (Te1111an} and inc,land the \ alue ot \\ h1ch 1S
not obta111able, bem£; mducled \\ lth lion manutactUlecl tOi
domest1c use" '1he rea"C)J1S gl\ en tOi OUI gett111g ,,0 "mall cl
part of thiS trade ale a" follO\\':> (1) Ge1mam and England
can produce a cheape1 a1tlde, (2) fle1ghts ale cheape1 t10m
,-
How about the 0 0 Z E?
If you found a hole a yard square
in the side of your dry kiln, you
would repair it at once. Don't you
know that the heat is oozing from
millions of pores III your wood,
brick or concrete kilns? That the
combined area of these pores makes
a hole bigger than your kiln door?
Seal these pores with steam proof,
acid proof, fire proof EBONOID
Kiln Coating
and see how easy it is to keep your
kiln hot. Ebonoid will also stop
rusting and prevent decay.
SOLE AGENTS
Grand Rapids Veneer Works
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
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lU10pe, due to the fact that heavy, nonperishable merchan-dhe
1S hlOUght he1 e 111'ial!mg ves'iels, wh1ch are glad to get
all pO"~lble cal c,o on the voyage out, as they must come here
to load mang 10\ e bal k, dn l-dIVI, and other dye and cab met
\\ oud", (3) mll1 e actl\ e canvas",mg by the German and Eng-
11"h "ale':>men, (4) the plmupal commerCIal houses in Mara-caibo
al e (Tel man and naturally, all things being equal, pre-fel
to buy from Germany The 01 dinary grades of European
metal bedstead", CO'it $7 to $10, and retal! at $20 to $25.
II e1ght on th1~ class of merchand1se from Europe is about
SI; to $17 50 per metnc ton Metal furl11ture pays an import
dut\ of j cents pel 22 pounds, gross we1ght, plus a surtax of
:;; pel cent of the duty As all Venezuelan customs duties
al e computed on the glOSS weight of the shipment, mcluding
casmg and packm!?, matel ial, local Importers always request
that merchanchse he packed or clated as lightly as possible,
consl"tent \'"lth the safety of the goods. In this particular
\me!ICan expOi tel s have an advantage over European houses
a" the1r good" ale loaded on the steamers in New York and
unloadedm Mal aca1ho without transshipment or double hand-hng
The hest way to estahhsh connections in this market
\\ ouJd be the sendmg of Spal11sh-speakmg salesmen. If this
h at present Impractlcable all correspondence and advertising
'ihould be m the Spal11sh language. The merchants of Mara-caibo
whose addlesses ale transmitted carry lines of furniture
and beds (On file m the Bureau of Manufactures.)
Consul E i\ \Vakefield, Port Ehzabeth, Cape Colony,
South Afnca-;( early all the brass and iron beds, woven-wire
and steel spnngs, metalhc couches, and folding chairs are at
pre'ient 1mported from England, and the demand, espec1ally
for medlUm-p-riced 1ron beds, 1S except10nally good. The bed
most 111 demand here is a cheap, sen iceable one 431 feet
w1de, COSt111gm England $322, w1th packmg extra. Illustra-t10ns
forwarded (and procUl able from the Bureau of Manu-factures)
should gl\ e a good 1dea of the dJfferent kinds of
beds m the market here now, as each l111eon wh1ch a price is
gl\ en repl e"-enb a lme stocked by one of the largest importers
m South ~f1lca If pnces can be met the market is here.
'1hese beds are 111\anably packed 111half-dozen lots.
There 1"" however, a dJfference made 111the packing ac-cord111g
to whether the bed", are expected to be sold in lots of
one, two or three beds of a k111d, or in lots of half a dozen
each A few of the larger houses 111Johannesburg, Pretoria
and Knnberle) v\ ho a1 e not direct 1mporters buy of the im-port111g
houses in Port Ehzabeth comparatively large quanti-ties,
but the bulk of the trade is in small orders. When beds
WEEKLY ARTISAN
are expected to be sold in half-dozen or doztl1 lots they are
imported m a single case, half a dozen in a case, firmly packed
in straw or excelsior w1th a layer of very heavy packmg paper
between the straw or excelslOr and the case. All the brass
work is carefully covered w1th soft paper. The charge for
packmg six beds in a single case in tlllS manner 1S$2 19. In
packing beds wh1ch are e'{pected to be sold m less than half-dozen
lots each bed is packed separately, but they are then
fastened together with wooden stl aps m lots of six so that for
purposes of sh1pment they really form a smg-le ca~e contain
mg one-half dozen beds. Dy packmg m tIllS manner the
broad surfaces of the packages mtended for the interior of the
case may be crated. A good sohd covenng is necessary for
THIS store is known as
"The Home of Good Furni-ture,"
and it wouldn't be possible
to describe it better.
"Good furnIture"doesn't mean hlgh-pnced
furmtureany more than "a good
Clllzen" means a wealthy cItIzen. Our fifty-cent
challs and two-dollar tables are Just as" good furn·
Iture" as our thousand doUar bedroom sUites, the
purchase of one of these IS Just as certam to make
a satisfiedcustomer as the purchase of the other,
and It'S what you thmk when you get home that
counts WIth us. Here are a few specials that may
mteresl you'
Actual Reductions
Regnlal' Special
C1Tcasslan Walnut Dresser $11000 $6750
Colomal Mahogany Chlffomer 6500 44 00
Sohd Mahogany Dressmg Table 2900 1S 50
Solid Mahogany Four Post Bed 3200 1850
Soltd Mahogany Cane Panel Beds 4000 2950
Sohd Mahogany Rush Seat Rocker 1600 1050
Solid Mahogany Upholstered Seat Ro¢ker 2100 1876
Kentlworth -ChalT 1750 1150
KenIlworth Rocker 17 50 11 50
Hepplewhlte Desk Chair 19 00 15 50
Overstuffed LIbrary ChaIt' 4200 2600
So1td Mahogany Colomal L)bt'ary Table 9500 6950
Sohd Mahogany:; ptece Parlor SUite 15000 9850
Overstuffed FireSide Chair 4200 2600
Sohd Brass Beds guaranteed 1250 and up
LoU1S V SolId Mahogany Dresser 150 00 85 00
60 mch Sohd Mahogany Office Desk wholesale pnce $90
Oqr pnce $78 $0 Investigate
KLINGMAN'S
Sample Furniture Company
loola, FountaIn and DIviSIon Sta
Furmture SaIls/actIon VISItors WeJcome
A Grand Raplds Pattern.
one side of each of the two outer packages mtended for the
top and bottom of the case. They are firmly strapped w1th
wood or iron to preyent any poss11111lty of breakmg open.
The interior packmg is exactly the same as previously de-scribed.
The price per bed for packmg m tlus manner is from
61 to 73 cents. A combination of drfferent steamsh1p lines
unite in a regular New York-South Afncan ,.,ervice of two to
four steamers per month. The lines engaged in this serv ice
are the Prince Line, Union Castle. Clan, Donald Curne & Co,
Bucknall, Huston and Ransa. The fre1ght rate on this class
of merchandise from New York to Algoa Bay (Port Eliza-beth)
is approximately $10 per ton of 40 cubIC feet measure-ment.
A hst of the principal importers of thIS consular dis-trict
handling beds, springs, couches and foldmg chairs 1S
forwarded to the Bureau of Manufactures.
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Sltel)oygan Novelty Co.
(j[ Order your hol-iday
goods early,
so as not to be dIS-appointed
III deliv-ery.
Our
Music Cabinets,
Ladles' Desks,
Bookcase!', etc.,
are just the things
for holiday gifts.
Write for Catalolloe.
(j[ Lady's 0 e s k
No. 305 is a good
one, but we have
many more to select
from.
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SHEBOYGAN, WIS.
Lady's Desk No.30S.
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POLISHES
Quality and Economy
Two excellent reasons for using the
Excelsior or World's
Fair Polish
on high grade furniture. We claim to sell the best and
most economical polishes, and have proved it by their
being the Standard polishes for 25 years of use in the
furniture manufacturing trade.
Get our prices and send for sample before placing
your next order.
GEO.I W. LIGHT MFG.
COMPANY,
. 2312 W. Van Buren St., CHICAGO. .- . ...._ ...
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Selling Pop Corn a~ all Art.
\01,\ thdt tbe haseball .,edSun I" open ,1£;d1n," "a1d the
seml-plofes"lonal Jan to the Cle\ eland PIam Dedle1 "I'm
1emmded of a '3H.;ht that I took 1ll dt1l1112,a h1~ £;ame out 111
ChIcago la"t summel I \\ d., then and thell 1l11p1c""cd \\ Ith
the fact that the1 e'" no ]0' Sll humble tlut the 11"ht 111<1n
can't gn e d1~n1ty to It
"Sellm£; pOpUlI n out ot a ha"kct due"n t 1 anl-, ,1" ,t11\
hot Job fOJ a £;lO\\n man tn he at dnc" 1l \(1 nut \<iU
ought to ha\ e "een the \\ ,n th1" jJUj)L()l11ma11 ,It the ( 111
cago game I speak uf had the ClU\\ d a "umc, L 11k"" the
teams 011 the field dId thlll~" pI ett\ .,pcctalula1 ta"ll1nn peo-ple
would tw n a\\ a\ f10111 the battet ()l thc base 1unnu tu
ha\ e a look at the bu,,\ httle J)UpCOl11"ale"ma11
"I don't kno\\ hlm he dIcl It Inn hc bad ,l \\ a\ db'lut
hU11 It'" ah, a) s a pleas1ll e to .,ee a man dt the hcarl e,t the
husincss OJ p1ofesslOn he\ enL,ac,ed 1ll \\hethe1 hc'., ,1 l.;leat
lawye1 01 capta111 of indu.,tI, 01 a POpl(!l11 \ e11du I h1"
man "as the best popC01n sdles111an I C\ el "a \\ I bUjJl h l
realized just hO\\ good he \\ a" till he \\ a" entltlul tr tIll
satisfactIOn of knO\\ mc, that he "tnllrl dt the tll]1 111thc lllll (It
enc1ea\ or that he had l ho"e11
"In the fi1st plale he held et gUild 1111euf tall-, elnd he
could sa) thin!?,'3 in a \\ a\ that call1ed l 011\ 1ct1On 1Ic dlcln t
merely holle1 'PupcOln-l a "ack' and let It c,o at th,lt rre
went on to tell about \\hele the lOIn \\a" lahecl and ,\hat
fine Cleame1Y buttel \\as u"ed to make 11 "0 th()]olu:;hh
palatable that nollod\ should thmk <if "1tt1n~ th1 r)\l~h ,1 lJdll
game without It
"Oldma1ily T am not eas1h "V\a\ed 1)\ ,In\ ,,()!t or "lJLll
bmdmg 01 a tOlY, bu t blamed If that pope ()]n m<1n drdn t ,,1\ e
me to undel stand that he \\ "" "ell 111 12, "umeth1l1!:, ckal \ '\1t I t
the 01 dman , and I ne\ el \\ a" much oj d 11<lnr1t I 111t111, h
popC01n or peanuts 01 an\ "ulh tIulk Imt V\hen th1" dUlk
came along on hI', final tIll' and announced that 1t \\ ould hl
h1" Idst t1111ea10u11d that aftel11I)011 I motlUned to h1111tr lu
me ha\ e a "ack 1 1eally felt a., It I had .,a\ ed 111\"rlr 1)\ I
nallow 111a1gm, flam 1111.,,,mc, one or tho.,e hidlme i)jljl']
tUl11t1es
"It \\asn't onl) V\1th h1., 1111e()t tall-, that he .,lHi11e elthu
ff somebod\ a )od 01 t\\o hom the 11Cdle"t dl"le \\a\er! tl
h1111fOJ a "ack of pOpCOl11 he \\ould to,," It 11~11t mt,) thl
111an\ hands \\lth all the accuraL\ ot ()11e ut tIle men lI\1t
111 the field pnttm[', the ball to fi1"t ha"c. and hl l1l \ L1 letl1ul
to catch the l11d~el 01 dune that the 1m) e\ \\ ()llld lhl Il\\ ll<llk
to h11n He d1d all thIS \\ 1th a neeltne"s and de "tet1l\ that
\\on adl1111atlon f10m e\el)hod) al011l1d hIm Onle d \\hole
sectIOn of the gland.,tand applauded hU11 tll! the alCU1ac \
\\ 1th whIch he shot back a l1llkel of cha\1(;(' to ,1 Cll"t0111U
WIth his thumb.
"L p to that tune 1'1 nn e1 taken the populln 111,111"]olJ
vC1Y serIously, but I know now that It doesn't matter 11l
what a man does If he':" the he:ot ma11 111 h1:o hne hh \\ 0) k
WIll stand out a:" c011c;piClou"ly as the \\ h1"ke1 c; un a "ta"l
anal dllst '-Chlca~o Intel Oce2n
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Here is
a Chair
that's
a seller.
Write for
the price.
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No 83.
GEO. SPRATT & CO.
SHEBOYGAN, WIS.
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Be careful of the dealer who tells you he can
furnish cutters "as good or better than MorrisWood
& Sons." He is imposing upon both you and our
reputation.
If you would have cutters which do the most
perfect work, at the least expense, that wear out on
the jointer and not on the emery wheel, which save
their first cost in a few weeks, in the saving of time,
required to grind and adjust sectional cutters, write
UI right now for further information.
We have made solid steel cutters for thirty-six
years. Ia that worth anything to you?
A trial order is our most convincing argu-ment.
Write now before you forget it.
MORRIS WOOD & SONS
5108 W. Lake St., CHICAGO, ILL.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
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QUALITY MACHINES-ISN'TIT
TOOBAD-People
wonder where their profits are going when the trouble usually lies in poor equIp-ment
A little foresight in the beginning would have saved them dollars--a httle more money in-vested
at the start in "OLIVER" "QUALITY" equipment.
.Some manufacturers of wood working tools shght their output by puttmg in poor matenals-employmg
poor workmen-simply to be able to make a little more profit. "Oliver" tools are bUIlt
along machine toollines-careful-accurate-durable-safe.
Some purchasers fail to investigate thoroughly before placing their order. Some unscrupulous
salesman tells them to purchase something-they go ahead-find out too late they are wrong-lose
money, whereas a letter addressed to us would have procured our catalogs-set them thmking-saved
them money.
ISN'T THAT TOO BAD.
"OLIVER" No. 61 Surfacer.
OURLINE-SURFACE
PLANERS
HAND JOINTERS
SANDERS
WOOD TRIMMERS
CHAIN MORTISERS
LATHES
"OLIVER" No. 60 Saw Bench.
SAW BENCHES
SWING CUT.OFF SAWS
BAND SAWING MACHINES
BORING MACHINES
SAFETY CYLINDERS
VISES, CLAMPS, ETC., ETC.
ADDRESS DEPARTMENT "D"
OLIVER MACHINERY CO.,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., U. S. A.
BRANCH OFFICES-
1st National Bank Bldg , Chicago. 111.
No. 50 Church St., New York City.
..------------~_._--------_.-~----'.... _. --
Much Old Furniture Should Be Burned.
Dealers 111second hand goods 111many c1tIes attend the
rummage sales conducted by chanty and church soc1etIes and
pKk up con"lde1able old fur11lture at nom111al cost OccaslOn-ally
a p1ecc of uncommon value 1S removed f10m an att1c
V\here 1t has been stored fm many years and 1S offe1 cd and
qtllckly p111cha"ed by the COlln01sseU1 111a1t fUlmtUle ,Yhen
the loose Joints haye been repall ed and the p1ece 1efimshed
1t usually attracts the attentlOn of a collector who '\lll111gly
pays a fancy p11ce for it Much of the stuff is of httle value,
howeve1 The wnte1 V\1tnessed the sale of an oak commode
111good order, 1ecentl), for $1 00 "\ small] efngerator W01th
$8.00 when new, sold for flfty cents c\ v cry good sofa frame
for $200 and challs brought from tV\enty-five cents to $400.
An enameled 1ron bedstead, such as a reta1ler would sell for
$800 sold for $4.00 l\Tetal bcd"teads detellorate 111value but
slightly and when 1efin1shed pass f01 new A d1esser worth
$1500, when ne\Y, sold f01 $6.00.
There lS too much old furniture 111the Gmted States. A
great quantIty of it 1S sold and resold many tImes In New
Orleans the second hand dealers are selhng furniture that
was made 111France more than a century ago. L\ great deal
of the old stuff, of no value 111an a1tIstIc sense, b filled w1th
disease ge1ms and 1S a stand111g menace to the health of a
commumty. The fur11ltu1 e of many old hotels should be de-stroyed
for the reason mentlOned. .\ few ) ears ago the
manufacturers of planas 111the L;11lted States were over-bm
dened w1th old planas, taken 111exchange for new ones It
was deemed unW1se to offe1 the 111struments for sale The
manufacturers prefe1 red to sell new 111struments, on wh1ch
there was mal e profit and greater satIsfactlOn to purchasers
and sellers than could be dern ed flam the sale of the second
hRnd pianos J n the exchangl11g of a new f01 an old l11stru-
1125 West Temple St., Los Angeles, Cal.
Pacific Bldw.,Seattle, Wash.
. ..... ..----~I
7
ment \ C1y hitle \ dIne 1~ gl\ en to the latte1 The manufac-turers
finally dec1ded to dcstI oy the old planas on hand, and
th1S wa" done by means of file afte1 the mstruments had been
assembled at a remote spot on Long Island, near the sea. The
owners of the ]tmk joined m a banquet after the flames had
performed the1r \York In the mterest of the public health 1t
m1ght be W1se for every commu11lty to make prov1slOn for
the mspectlOn of old fm11lture and when the germs of d1sease
are found, cause the same to be bm ned
An Eye Sensitive to Color.
If you are of those ,ovho thmk that a1tlsts a1e so abstract-ed
that they are sleepy you should ha\ e seen a pamter 111a
house V\here an auctlOn was gomg on. It was one of those
ad, ertIsed as a sale of the contents of a pnvate res1dence,
V\lth the inference that the objects to be sold were the prop-erty
of the house's occupant
The painter stroll cd m on the lookout f()1 an)thmg useful
in furniture or dec01 atlOn There was such a multIphcity of
contents that he was moved to mqlllre ,\ hether all had been
the furn1shings of the place as occupied by the owner and
was assured that such was the fact. He walked qmetly to a
wall and plll1ed out one 01 tvvo of the p1ctures, lookmg at the
wall behmd them Then he walked out
"The wall beh111d p1ctures that have hung the1 e for any
tuue, you know," he sa1d to an mqu1 "ltIv e fnend, "lS of a
d1fferent tone from the re"t of the wall. That wall was just
the same behmd those p1ctures as elsewhere No, I wasn't
100k111gf01 dust"
So 1f your eye lS ::,en'i1tn e to color 111the finer gradatlOns
and you ever need the tIp 1ecog11lze that artists also contI i-bute
to yom p1actIcal knowledge
a WEEKLY ARTISAN
S~ IS CERTAINLY ECCENTRIC
Woman Who Has Built a House Without Beds
or Closets.
A house with no beds in it IS a novelty, indeed The
lady who owns it lives in \Vashing-ton and has become fam-ous
in many ways She IS talented as a pamter and sculptOl
as well as being an authOl, actI ess and "taiSe manage!. at
times, and her phIlanthropIes take up much of her tIme ::.rrs.
Albert Clifford Barne) and her t\\ 0 daughtel s al e ven ex-ceptionally
gifted and are disciples of BahaIsm, an East IndlOn
religion. Mrs. Barney's talent for colors has been tUIned to
account in the mventlOn of a plOcess of d) emg cloth The
rights to this invention have been tUl ned 0\ el to the \\ omen
and chIldren of N elg-hbOlhood House, a challt) m \\ 111chIIrs
Barney is interested. In this way many poor people have
become self supporting ]\11 s Barne) '", activ Itles are
many but these, as well as the conduct of her vast e",tate
were all subordmate to the bUlldm£; of the StudIO Hou",e.'
as she calls it, commenced about seven) ears ago Thlou!;h
this she first became WIdely known as an eccentI Ie \Yhen
abroad she had collected everythmg artistIc and odd \\ hlch
met her eye untIl she had enough to stock a d07en cuno
shops.
Reversing the OIdmaly custom of bluldmg a hou",e and
then furnishmg it in accordance WIth the genel al arUstIe tone
and design, she reversed proce<;ses, bought her cunos bllc-a-brac,
and antiques from Dublm to Pekmg, and then Oletout to
build a house around them The I esult \\ as the StudIO
House." It is located on Shendan CIrcle, the mo",t tashlOn-able
distnct in newer \Yashmgton. handsome but unassum-ing,
and in its exterior offers no hint of the eccentncltIes
within.
Fearing that no architect could embody m \\ ood and stone
the ideas she has wrought out. she became her o\v n archItect
she became her own contractor, and personally sa\\ to the
selection of every bIt of matenal that \\ ent 111tOIt There b
not a door knob, a panelmg, or a unique bIt of wood 01 metal
designing that she dId not WOlk out herself. otten ~om~ to
the shops and standing ovel the machmlst, mstructmg hun
in every particular of his V\01k
In decorating the walls Wll1Ch vvere to sel ve as a back-ground
for the wealth of nch tapestnes and hangmgs she had
procured abroad, she donned the painter's blouse and, gettlllg
in among them mixed evelY dab of paint that \\ ent 111,com-bining
the colors WIth as much care as though she \\ ere
pamtmg a dIfficult portrait
Thus from cellar to garret she constructed the hou:"e, hel
personalIty standmg out in every form and shade of it. The
rooms, passages, and halls were bUIlt solely WIth an eye to
setting off the curios, hence they are of a nature to bewilder
the ordinary mortal.
The floOling for the ground and second stories, as well as
the connectmg staIrcases, are made of ordmary house brick-
\\ h) hnck mstead of wood does not appear. On the second
floOl IS a large room, specifically called the "studio" to dis-tlllguish
It from other rooms, although that is the name given
the entn e bUlldmg
ThIS 100m, where Mrs Bal11ey does her painting, is filled
\v Ith the most CUlIOUSof her antique finds; it also overflows
\\ Ith 11111tlmerable fat Images of Buddha, who, in the Bahai
belIef, has some considerable standlllg as a deity. There is
an ancient Spanish arch with the supporting pillars, which
V\ hlle old enough to be interestmg, looks most ludicrously out
at place thus cllbbed in by a modern house.
In the mam hall a handsome marble altar, taken from
some old ItalIan church, forms the man tel; there are columns
of Jade flom the Onent, couches from Pompeii, vases gathered
£Iom all Over the eal th-m short, a wilderness of things that
used-to-be. but \\ hlch have outlived their usefulness by several
centunes and now serve to make art dealers rich. There is a
\\ arId of treasUl e m the way of tapestl ies, costly marbles, and
pIICeless CUIlOs-and thel e is not a bed in the house!
Followmg the manner of living adopted by the Greeks
m the golden age of Pencles, the member of the Barney
famIly take theIr I epose upon wooden touches made of
COUIse, undel 1\11 s Barney's eye for that purpose.
The most Oltarthng thing about the whole whimsical build-mg
IS that, although MI s. Barney is essentially feminine in
her tastes, she vvould not permit a single closet to be built in
the "StudIO"
DespIte the dIfficulties of hfe under such a conglomer-atIOn
of condItIons, anCIent, medIaeval, and modern, the Bar-neys,
when in this country, make the "Studio" their home,
and appeal to extract as much satisfaction out of it as the
ne\\ mllhonalre in his modern house.
::'Ir'" Dalney has, by her will, bequeathed the whole of
thIS aggregatIOn of the ages, together with the house that
holds It, to the cIty of \Vashmgton; the use it is to be put to
IS not speCIfied, but left to bother the CommIssioners of
SOlne futule day
::'It s Bal ne) has been gIven considerable space in the
ne\\ spa pel s recently She sent a marble statue from Italy,
mtended to be placed in the "house without beds." One of
her daughters 15 saId to have been the model for the statue,
whIch IS of mOl e than lIfe size, too large, in fact, to go through
the doors and as the draymen who carted it to the house, had
no authollt} to break the V\alls, they left it on the lawn. It
\\ aOlundraped and created a great sensation, attracting great
crowds, until offIcers of an "anti-nude" society covered it
WIth blankets. It has been removed from the lawn and placed
m a shed awaltmg orders from the owner.
Wood Bar Clamp Flxturee. Per Set SOc. "
...........
Patent Malleable Clamp Flxturee.
E H. SHELDON & CO • Chicago. Ill.
Gentlemen -We are pleased to state that the 25 dozen Clamp FIxtures whIch
we bouJ:ht of you a httle over a year ago are gIVIng excellent serVIce We are
wen satisfied WIth them and shall be pleased to remember you whenever we want
anyth10g addItIOnal 10 thIS hne. Yours truly,
Sioux CIty, Iowa. CURTIS SASH & DOOR CO •
30 000 Sheldon
Steel Rack
f Vleee
Sold on approval and an uncon-ditIOnal
money back gnarantee
SHELDON'S STEEL BAR CLAMPS.
Guaranteed Indeetructible.
We SOhClt pnvllege of send10g samples and
our complete catalogue.
E. H. SHELDON & CO.
328 N. May St., Chicago.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
MARSHFIELD, WISCONSIN
No. 2228 Toilet Table.
Dressers
Chiffoniers
Dressina Tables
Suites
Wardrobes
Sideboards
Buffets
Etc.
Made in
Oak, Bird's-Eye MapJe,
Mahol;1any, etc.,
and
All Popular
Finishes No. 2240 Toilet Table
SEND FOR OUR COMPLETE CATALOGUE
Carved and Guilded Church Panels.
Wt!liam Lamel Harris, who designed and painted many
of the mural decoratiom in the Church of the Pauhst Fathers
in New Y01 k, IS engaged in completing a series of seven bass-wood
panels, elaborately carved and gilded, to be placed in
the Pauhst church next month. The seven panels are unique,
inasmuch as a great variety of materials is being employed
by the artist in theIr production.
"These materials may be said to come from hterally the
four quarters of the globe," said Mr. Harris in speaking of the
panels. "The bass"" ood used in theIr construction comes
from the AdIrondacks and is by no means easy to procure
and has to be prepared WIth great ca,re. The mother of pearl
used In the settIng of jewels In the seven branch candlesticks
and the tat! of the PhoeUlx (a part of the decoration) comes
from the seacoast of the Holy Land and was gathered in the
far away mal ts of Palestine and Egypt.
"'rhe lap~s lazulI comes from SIberia, the jade from China,
turquoise from Persia and the sardonyx from Syria. The
opals and malachIte are from other countries and all al e
blended and harmonized in color and combined to heighten
the effect WIth SlIver and gold. My method is a revival of
the art of the early primitive artists of Italy and Holland and
is a combInation of tempera and oil painting.
"Great care has been taken in securing materials and in-stead
of USIng turpentIne I have substituted the oil of lavender
WIth a VIew of obtaIning greater permanency and brilliancy
of colors. The copal varnish has been prepared by one man,
who makes a specialty of thIS medium in the Latin Quarter,
Paris. He gathers his guns and materials for thIS purpose
In some remote place in Araby."
The figul e of Christ is the principal figure in one of the
most important panels in the series, and the seven branched
UPHAM MANUFACTURING COMPANY
9
•
candlesticks shown in the compositlOn, with the light of the
candles extinguished, is a tradItion of Catholicism. Above
the symbols of the TrImty, Alpha and Omega are surrounded
by passion flowers, whIch form a part of the decoration. The
two smaller designs on either side of the panel represent the
Phoenix.
There are also twelve white lambs carved on the panels,
the ancient symbol of the twelve apostles, who, lIke lambs,
were led to slaughter. Mr. HarrIS visited Central Park last
summer to obtain studies from the lambs gambollIng there
and these studIes are now taking form in the panels approach-ing
completion.
Among other decorations designed by the artist for the
Pauhsts are a carved religious doorway and "The CrUCIfixion,"
a large paintIng which was unvet!ed several years ago.-Ex.
-'" ---- --._._-_.-------_. -- ------- ---------
REVERSIBLE AND ONE-WAY CUTTERS
The Shimer ReverSible Cutter5
for Smgle Spindle Shapers, Vanety
Moulders or Fnezers, are carefully
moulded opposite to the shape of
the mould to be produced, in such
a way as to have only the cutting
edge touch the lumber They are complete-inexpenslve-tim~
savmg.
We abo manufacture One-Way Cutters for Double Spindle
Shapers. They are used III pairs, right and left, one Cutter ~f
each shape for each spllldle. In ordenng sepedal shape15 n~t
hsted lTI our catalogue, send a wood sample; or an accurately
made drawmg Addre~s
SAMUEL J. SHIMER &. SONS,
___ •. a.a. MILTON, P.E.N.•NSYLVANI•A _~
10 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Grand Rapids Paragraphs.
vVllham \Vlddlcumb uf the \\ 1dcl1lomb 1 UJllltUll (11111
pany, V\ ho 1 ettlllled flOm a "hOl t ea"tct n tllp. 1 clenth II
ports that he found the dealel" m that seLtlOn "omen hd t dl"
apPoll1ted over the condttton of fall husl11e,,-,. but ,111 \\ ell
hopeful Many of them had noted a sh£;ht 1mpl 0\ emCll! m
trade since the first of this month and neady all ale lontlcllllt
that there will he a ~enel al pickmf; up befO! e the opelllll~ oj
the hohday ,;ea,;on Mr Wlddicomh ha" noted ,1 cons1del able
Improvement m his factory busine"" dlllln~ the pdst fl \\
weeks and believes that p1O,;pects fOl the holIda, b'hllle""
are much bettet than the) "el e a month a~o
The Grand RapIds Refll(!,el atOl CC)ll1Pan, a1e 1 apHlh
building up then expO! t 1>usmes" the InU ease hem(!, lal ~el\
with Au"traha and South \mettcan Cotl11ttle" rOt the e,
port trade the I efl Igelatlll " ale paL ked to stdnd the lonL, "C,l
voyage and rottf;h handlm(!, The' al e ,\ t "pped 111 hCd\ \
watetproof paper. to ~uald agdIn"t mOl,;t11le thcn thC\ elll
boxed and the boxe,; ale hound '\Ith l10n hand" dt the ll1l]-...
and 111 the mIddle ~mce thh method ot palkm(!, \\ d" ,1duplU!
the company ha\e lecel\ed no complamh thdt ~o(J(l" 11a\l
heen dama~ed In transIt
The vVagemakel lurmture compam are htllldmQ, an ad
dltion to their plant wlllch wlll practlcall) douhle thel1 capa
cIty It will be SO x 100 feet tv\ a stone;, and basement. of
mIll construct1On. on concrete foundatlOn and \\ III be cum
pleted in December. The company lS aho about to put 1Il .1
new power plant of 150 horse-pO\vel
The Johnson Brothers Furnltul e company h 1u"t (1)111
plet1l1g a speoal OJ del for eH~hteen hhrary table" and t011lteen
large chalrs to match. made of kOd v\ ood tI um the Pll1hp
pines. The congre""lOnal pal tv ,\ hlch accompdl11ed I'll "1
dent Taft, then secretal y of V\ al to the Plllltppme." tOUl Ul
five years ago. brought home a quantIty at the KOd lo~"
The) were made into chall" and tables f01 the membel" ,11
the party Those log., \\ el e StOl ed for seasonIng fOl a couple
of years, and then wel e sent here 101 another } eal u1 (11 \
mg About a yeal ago they were sa\\ ed at the Gland RapId"
Barrel company's mIll aud the lumbet ha., smce been ~OIl1-;
through the dryll1g plOcess The \\ 01k of makll1g the lUI1l
ber into furl11ture began about a month ago and the ~o()(l"
are now neady leady fOl hl1lshin~ The \\ood .,ol11e\\hat Ie
sembles cherry 111 calm and ha" a moderate fig 1lI C It makl"
THE "U"':nd.lpARl.OR NEW..A.U ~. BED
Need not be moved
from the wall.
Always ready with
beddmg in place.
So simple, 80 easy, a
child can operate It.
Hal roomy wardrobe
box.
CHICAGO, Erie & Sedgwick NEW YORK. Norman & Monitor.
attl.ldl\ e fl11l11tllle. hut those \\ho have used It declare there
J" no dall~ll that It \\ 111"upplant mallO~any to any great ex-tcn
t
\m()m~ tIlL I ecent shIpments and 01 ders for the Alex-anclcl
Doclcl" patent £;ang clm etal1ers is a twenty-spll1dle ma-dllnt'
fm \\ II1d"Ol. ~m a ScotIa, a twenty-five-spindle to
()l()gue (,elman) , a ten-sp111dle to Galt, Ontano; a fifteen-
"pll1dle to l\an'3\llle. Ind. and a ten-spindle to Newark, O.
In ",1\\ tdhk-, and othel WOOd-WOlk111g machme:o they are
cll )111-., .l g()od hu"mes"
\ \ ()( dcn kn()h" al e bemg 1 eplaced by cal ved handles, in
11l1Ltllll1ltUIL dculldmg to John \\'addell of the Waddell
\IanutaLtullI1f; COlnpan) In the medium and cheaper
g I adee, the \\ ooden knobs still ha \ e the preference.
The Gl and RapIds DIm\ PIpe and Dust Arrester com-p.
ll1\ al e \ el \ hu s, on a lot of large 01 del s that will take
them some tIme to fill, but they are takmg more orders right
alan£; and furl1lshll1g a system which everybody that uses it
declaJ es the best 111 the countr)
l he Tmpellal FllIl1Iture company have awarded the con-t1.1l
t t()1 con"t1l1L hng the addltlOn to theIr plant to the Olson
lUlhtluctwn compan) The ne" bt1llding is to be of modern
mtl! lOlhtlUl hon. G,) " 16') feet, fOUl "toiles and basement and
\\ tll be completed earl} 111 the spnng.
The ~l11ellcdll Can 111£;and Manufactunng company are
lJlJlldll1g dn ac1c1Jtllln to theIr plant, to be used for storage
a nel b\ "lllppl11g department The bt1llding will be SO x 80
teet t\\ 0 stolles.
\\ Ilham -\ RI;,tenpal t, buyel for the IV. & J. Sloane
compal1\ 01 San FI anCl"CO, Cal , was in GI and Rapids, for a
cla\ 01 t \\ a the 101e pal t of this week.
Rockford Chair and
Furniture Co.
ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS
Dinina Room Furniture
BUFFETS, CHINA CLOSETS and TABLES
Library Furniture-LIbrary Desks, Library
Tables, LIbrary Bookcases, Combination Book.
cases, Etc.
Our entire line will be on exhibition in January
on the third floor of the Blodgett Building,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 11
FURNITURE FACTORY CONDITIONS
Business for September ComparedWith That of
the Samf"Month in 1909.
Eatly m the cnnent month ahout a hundred and fifty
furlllture manufacturel s, in all parts of the countly, vvere
asked to an'owel a number of questIons relabve to condltj()l1S
m September, 1910, as compared with the same month 111
1909 One hundl ed and twenty-seven of them answel ed
nearly all of the quenes A few neglected to answer some of
the most Important and othel s faIled to respond.
To the questIOn "How do your September orders compare
WIth those hooked m September 1909?" fifty-three out of 127
reported an increa,;e of S to 2S per cent; twelve an increase of
over 2S per cent, fifteen decrea..,e,; of 10 to 25 pel cent; one a
decrease of ovel 2S pel cent and fOlty-srx answered "Ahout
the same"
Companng shIpment';, mstead of ordel s, sIxty-two repOl t-ed
increases ranging from 5 to 25 per cent; fourteen l11creases
of over 2S pel cent, seventeen decreases of 5 to 25 per cent,
one a decrease of over 2) per cent and tlllrty-three, "about
the same."
To the question "AI e you running full hand and full-time,"
thl1 ty-elght saId short-handed, S to 25 per cent,
thirty-two nmnmg 40 to S9 honrs per week, sntv-four run-ing
full-force, full-tm1e; five running overbme
Seventy-seven reported theIr stock on hand at:>about the
same as a year a~o Nme showed an mcrease of ) to 20 per
cent; thlrty-nme a decrease of S to 25 pel cent and two a
decrease of ovel 25 per cent
The cost of labor IS shown to have mcreased flum 2 to
10 per cent, the average increase bemg about 7 per cent The
average 111crease 111the cost of lumbel IS 73~ pel cent; glass
15 per cent and varnish and finishing matena1s 10 per cent
(These Ieports mel e made befol e the Iecent advances 1111m-seed
011 and turpentme) Two factones reported lumber and
burlaps slightly lower than a year ago.
On collectIOns seventy-n111e reported "faIr;" twenty-n111c
saId "slow;" elght "good" and eleven "velY slow"
Forty-seven consIdered the outlook for fall bus111et:>s
"good ;" forty-four "faIr;" twelve "only faIr;" ten "not good ,"
two "very poor" and five declal ed "nobody knows."
IDEAL STAMPING AND TOOL CO.
SOCKETS, DOWELS,
TOP fASTENERS
and GUIDES
for Extension 1abies.
Also special stampings
In steel and brass
Write for
NO·KUM.OUT TABLE SOCKET. Patent applied for samples lInd prices
465 N. Ottawa St., Grand Rapids, Mich.
\s to the capaCIty of productIOn as compared with Sep-tember,
1905-five yealS ago-eIghty-two leported no change
five had mCl eased their capaClty 100 per cent; thl ee 50 pel
cent, one 40 per cent, fOUl 33 per cent, eleven 25 pel cent;
twelve 20 pel cent, two IS per cent and two 10 per cent
A.s \\ III be seen the reports seem to show that the maJor-
Ity of factolles have increased both theIr 01 del s booked and
the shIpments made dUflng Septembel thIS year as compared
"Ith the correspondmg month last year; but the factones as
a whole seem to be runnlllg about the same tIme schedule as
last) eal at thIS tnne and ploducll1g about the same quantlt)
of goods 01 pOSSIbly a sh£;htlv mcreased quantlty because of
lllcreased capaclt) Stocks on hand al e reported on the
average a httle lowel than last} ear The reports on matenal
dnd labor 1l1dlcate that the cost of thet:>eItems 111manufacture
have 111creased more than 10 pel cent on the average whIch
would probabl} indIcate an 111creased cost of p10ductlOn of
about 8 per cent at the pI esent time at:>compared WIth a year
ago CollectIOns are leported only faIr and wlth a numbeJ
of factones, slow The outlook for bus111ess for the balance
of the season 1S 111dlcated to be faIr 01 good
It wlll be notlced that many of the factofle" have 111-
u eased theIr capacity 111the past {we years The actll,tl
figures as based upon the reports of the output for the same
factolles for the year 1905 are saId to show an 111crease of
apploXlmatel) two and a half 111llhon dollar,;
As a whole the reports are not dlscourag111g by am
meant:> They do not fUfl1l"h any JustlficatlOn f01 an 111-
crease 111wages that IS bem~ agltdted 111some cities. Nelthel
do they Ju std) the "croakel s" W 110 al e 111dmed to wall m eJ
j11e"ent condlbons 111the furmtllle manufactunng 111dustl}
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Lentz Big Six
No. 694. 48 in. top,
No. 687. 60 m. top.
Others 54 in. top.
8 Foot Duosty/es
ANY FINISH
CHICAGO DELIVERIES
Lentz Table Co.
NASHVILLE, MICHIGAltt
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12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
ANTIQUE FURNITURE AND CURIOS
John V. L. Pruyn"s Famous Collection to Be Sold
at Public Auction.
Many people III man} lands knO\" of the collec tlOn u1
fur111tUle, art objects and h1st011cal 1 e1lCs made by the late
Mr. and Ml s. John V L PI uyn of '\Jban}, fOJ '\Ir PI tt} n had
traveled much and met many d1stlllgUl"hed per-;on~ a]Jlodd
and his home had many \1S1t01'-, HIS collectIOn cll1d the a,,-
soc1ations attached to some of the 1elIc:, and CtlllO-; otten
keyed the convel satlOn in the gl eat hotbe on Elk ~tI cet The
house changed hands last summel and now the collectIon
which he blOught together from many parb of the \\ odd IS to
be dIspersed at auctIon. The sale ]s to taJ,e pIau' "t the
AmellCan Art Galle11es, NeVv "\ Otk, and \\ 111 pI obd bl, raIl
dUrIng Horse Show \\ eek
The collectIOn IS so ,alled that It 15 dd'ficult to chal acte1
ize It III a word It lllclude-; OrIental pOtCelallb, antique
furmture, some most mtel e"tm[?, objects of old "lh e1\\ a1e
books, pnnts, autog1 aph lette1", pamtmg" ,\ atches, n U11e",
and so on. The h1"t01lCal 1 elIcs m thenbeh es al e d.., 'dlled
as the co11ectlOn as a vvhole
There 1'3 a Cmc111natl plate from the 1amous set ot (111un-natI
chma which Capt Samuel Shaw of Boston pI esentecl to
Gen. Washington Capt Shaw \vas the fi1st seCletalY 01 the
Older of the Cmcmnat1 The plate m thIS collectlOn "a" ob-tained
by Mrs Pruyn f1om ~Il Le\\ IS, the hlbband of X elhe
Parke Custis, to whom the Cincmnatl chma went b\ mhe11-
tance from Martha VV ashing ton.
A neIghbor of the Cmcinnatl plate IS the cane \\ 111ch LOt d
BYlOn presented to the actor who first produced' ':-Iazeppa '
The head of the cane P1CtUles the "\Ylld Horse of Tal tan' m
beautifully carved i, Oty Anothe1 nelghbol IS .:\la1 tm Luth-er's
weddmg ring. Then thel e 1" a set of chall s that unce be-longed
to Victor Hugo and there are objects that wele sold
flam the King of Holland's collection in 1849.
A pair of SlIver cups in the collect1On \\ el e once 0\\ necl
by Lord Darnley and a milk pot was once the pI opel t, u1
Oliver Cromwell 'rhere 1'l a small paten from \\lmh It ]'0
said that Mary Queen of Scots took the sacrament and the1 e
is a Book of HaUl s that is saId to hay e belonged to Cathel1ne
de MedICI A pall of sJ1ve1 candlestIcks came fIom the collec-tIOn
of the Duke of Buck111~ham Ul 1848 and a euftee pot 11om
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LOUIS HAHN II
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154 Livmgston St.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
DESIGNS
and Details of Furniture
CItIzens' Telephone 1702.
the collect1On uf Lord Lyndhurst VvhlCh was sold m London
1111865
Commg back to Amenca, there IS an elaborate silver
,ase bea1111iS tll1S mscription "B) CItIzens of PhIladelphia to
the11 tm\ nsman, CommodOl e Decatur-Esteemed for hIS vir-tues,
honO! ed for hIS valor."
TheIl' 1-; a copy of the "StlaVvbetry Hill Catalogue," of
Spence's Anecdotes," a pal t of DeBry's "Grand Voyage,;," a
I ell e e(!ttlOn of the BIble, ~ome Grangeri/ed books and publi-catIOns
of the BIblIophIle Society.
There al e some scarce plints, copper plate engravings by
Bollal, ra1th01 ne and others, some Ite111s of AmerIcana, art
1JOoks and book~ of 1efel ence pertaining to some of the ob-
1(ch m the collection, and some of the other things included
m It al e European ceramICS and glassware.
1\11 PI U} n hImself took speClal enjoyment in his rare
'-,lh el and pOl celam It has been WIitten of him and of his
home "'{one could enter that house WIthout bemg struck
\\ 1th the e,ldepce that every whe1 e met the eye of the rare
taste and culture of ltS 0\\ nero Chancellor John Van Schaick
Lansm~ Pru} n was a man of distinctlOn as well as of educa-hon
and refinement Of eomlderable wealth and generous
Impulses he rn)oyed the entrrtamment of hIS fnends HlS
n.oOl ,,\\ un:; \\ Ide to Ame11can and foreigner ahke, and court-e~
les I ecen ed 111£01 eign land'-, he 1 eturned in the most gene-
1 ou.., hnsP1tdht\ 111'-,pubhc and pnvate hfe brought him into
contact 1\ lth almo"t eVely plom111ent pel ,;onage m thIS coun-t1
\ ft om Us;O tu 1877, and few were the men of dlstmctlOn
that came to the lT111ted States who clId not bear a lettel of
llltl()(lud1Un to lhancellm Pruyn" PITT"SBURG -PLATi- GLASS co"~"'1 LARGEST .JOBBERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF I
GLASS
in the world. Mirrors, Bent Glass, Leaded Art Glass, Ornamental Figured Glass, Polished and Rough Plate Glass, Window Glass,
WIRE GLASS, Plate Gtass for Shelves, Desks and Table Tops, Carrara Glass more beautiful than white marble.
OENERAL DISTRIBUTORS OF PATTON'S SUN PROOF PAINTS AND OF PITCAIRN AOED VARNISHES.
tJl For anything in BUIlders' Glass, or anything m Pamts, Varmshes, Brushes or Pamters' Sundnes, address any of our branch warehouses, a
list of which ISgiven below
:NEW YOBE-Eudson a.n4 VanAam St••
BOSTO:N--tl-49 Sudbury st., 1-9 aowJr:n S\.
CEICAG0-442-452 Wabash Ave.
cmcm:NA'rX-Broadwa;y and CotU't St••
ST. LOmS-Cor. Tenth and Spruce st •.
M:Ilf:NEAPOLIB-500-516 S. Third St.
DETBOr:r-S3-59 Larned St., E.
GBA1!l'DB.A.PIDS,1lUOE-39-41 ... DlvlsloJl S\.
PI'l'TSBl7BGE-I0l-103 Wood St.
1lULWA'UEEJI,WIS.--492-494 Market St.
BOCB:ES"l'EB,:N.Y_WUderBldg., .ain IIIE:l:ohlm'. Sb.
BALTDIOBE-310-U-U W. :Pratt S\.
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CLEVELA:RD-1430-1434 W.st 'rhla'Cl St.
O]ll[AEA-llOl-1107 Eoward S\.
ST. PAl1L--459-461 Jackson st.
ATLAlIf'l'A,GA_30-32-34 S. Pryor S\.
SAVAJr:NAB:,GA.-745-749 Whea.toJl st.
XA.:NS.ASCI'1"Y -Plfth and Wyandotte St..
Bm:MDl'GEAllI, ALA.-2nd Ave. and 1I9th st.
Bl1PPALO. :N.Y.-372-74-76-78 Pearl St.
BBOOltLYN-Third Ave. and Dean st.
PJULADELPmA-Pitca.lrn Bldg.. Arch a.nd 11th
DAVE:NPOBT-41ll-416 Scott st.
OltLAB:O]ll[ACITY, OltLA., 210-212W. Pint St.
Sh.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 13
MR. KINDEL FOR CONGRESS
The "Freight Rate Buster" of Denver the Inde-pendent
Voters' Candidate.
DCl1\el Po<..,t,October 20-George J K111dc1will he noml-ndted
for Congre"" m the fIrst dIstrlrt thIS afternoon by the
J ndependent Voter<..,' league. Hc has formally accepted the
honor, taking the place of Edward MlChel", a jeweler, \\hom
the league nominated by petitlOn in August and filed With the
secretary of state.
Mr. Michels is president of the league and also chairman
of the committee to fill any vacancy on the ticket.
Fnends of Mr Kllldel urged him to make the race for
congress. Then they set about to have him nominated. There
belllg some doubt as to whether the triple alhance-Cltizens,
Geo J Kmdel's dIagrams, shOWIng dlscrlmlnatlOn agaInst Denver In "he
matter of freIght rates, even after the recent reduction ordered by the Inter-state
Commerce CommissIon and sustamed by the courts.
Platform Democrats and Progressive Republicans-could le-gally
fill vacancies on their state ticket, Mr. Michels offered
his place on the Independent Voters' league to Mr. K111del.
"I shall make the race," said Mr. Kindel, the "freight rate
buster," whom the citizens elected supervisor last spring.
"My slogan and platform will be "fairer freight and express
rates, also a parcel post, and above all a square deal to every-body,
irrespective of politics or creed."
Mr. Kllldel is well known in Colorado for hiS activity 111
secullng for Colorado cheaper freight rates. He is equally as
well known throughout the nation, because of hiS } ears of
"bucklllg" the 1allroads and express cOlllpames fm a "quarel
deal m the matter of rates to this state.
He says he is not only going to take the stump to push
hi" candidacy, but that he IS also having 300,000 unique cir-culars
pnnted for distribution throughout the first congress-sional
district. I'll make the nominees of the two old parties
go "ome," declarcd Mr. Kindel today. "I am contending for
a great principle that affects every man, woman and child in
the state."
Evcn under the lates that ha\ (' heen findlly estabhshed
by the U mted States SUPIeme court, Colm ado is still the vic-time
of railroad diSCIimlllatlOn, accordlllg to Kllldel, whose
"mt brought about the deci"ion.
By diagrams Kllldel shows how the ral1roads work out
their tanffs so as to keep this state in thrall.
Diagram B shows that the apex of high rates on east
bound freight is Denver, and that on west bound freight it is
Gl and Junction. I t costs a shipper $3 a hundred to send
goods from New York to San Francisco, and vicc versa, while
from the latter city to Denver the same rate holds, and from
New York to Grand Junction it is $388
Diagram A is more complicated, but also more graphic,
and it exhibits how skillful manipulation allows the railroads
to charge more for a short than for a long haul. Under the
new rates, the tariff from New York to Denver is $2.48.
From Denver to Salt Lake, via Grand Junction, allowing for
a reshipment, the rate is $250, while the through rate to Salt
Lake is $1 54. The injustIce is "hown by the fact that from
Mi&souri river points to the Utah capital it is $2 OS, although
the distance is 600 miles greater.
The local rates are shown on the straight line, and the
total of these, between ocean and ocean, is $6.58, though the
roads charge only $3 The through rate between New York
and Grand Junction is $388, while the shipper desires to send
send goods to San Francisco with a reload at Grand Junction
would have to pay $652, or 54 cents more than he would to
send the same goods through from New York to San Fran-
CISCOand back again.
Insurge.
From the Title Page of "Good Fixtures," the Seng com-pany's
House Organ-Unless a man be affhcted With chronic
cold feet, what a word to stir his fighting blood! Minted in
the heat of polItical strife it should be made current in the
vocabulary of business.
Insurge! It has a mihtant sound-It reeks of action, en-thUSiasm,
and valor.
To stand pat is to see the proceSSlOn pa"s you.
Let the politicians do as they Will, a busllless man must
Insulge! Insurge! Insurge!
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FREEDMAN CONVERTIBLE DIVAN BED
A Revolution in Parlor Bed Construction. An Immediate Success.
Full Size Bed in Divan Space.
'" .
SIMPLEST IN ACTION.
LEAST SPACE.
STRONGEST BUILT.
Supercedes all other Interchangeable Parlor Beds.
SEND FOR ILLUSTRATIONS AND PRICES.
FREEDMAN BROTHERS & CO.
Manufacturer. of Upholstered Furniture.
Fac"tory, 717.731 Mather St., CHICAGO.
• ••• 4 •• e __ .• __ ..
14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
HOUSE FURNISHING AS AN ART
Anlericans Beginning to Appreciate the Value of
Appropriate Decorations.
\mellca has VI. Ith1l1 the last ii' 0 decades e,pu lenced
what mIght be called an aVl.akenme, \ftel an e,tended 1I1tel-
\aL she has come onLe mOle to a ledll/atlOn thdt dllhltec-tUI
al beaut} IS essentIal to both t(l\\ nand Lot1l1tJ\ I hh ap-p1euatlOn
lIas heen la1t;eh 111'itlu111enta1111 ueatllle, an 1I1tel
e'it 111the equally eS'ientIal art of decOlatlnt; and f111l1l'ih111t;
the intellor of the alLhlteLtlllal QluUnle he It pnhhL hmlrl
inti manSlOn OJ cottae,e
\0 lont;el does the matte1 01 apj)1oj)l1atL 111llJ1~111nt;~
concern onh the fed The I each tauhtIe" f(11 'itnch the
malked I111plO\ements 111 the model" adopted h\ mannfaL-turer'i
fOl I eady made f1lll1ltlll e the ad\ antage" nO\\ at hand
111 the II a) uf obta111111t;I epl odnc tlOn" ot old ftll111tL11l tL" tile"
and (eldmIL'i ,1" \\ell a" the cnL011laliCment uheled 1)\ thL
\allot1'i 'iOCletle" of alt', and uath 111 the j)1()(\nLtlill1 (ll
v\ 01 tIn al tIde" at ,1 C0111pdla tl\ eh "mall ouda \ enabl( ,tl\
V\ho VI. III to 111ake then home'i attl act1\ c <,a\" '-,amue1 n
Dean 111the House BeautIful
In the WIde aV\ake COmmUl11tle" the c\a\ ()t the 111tellOl ~()
\ 1\ Idly pOl tray ed ])\ '\ldl k J \\ a1l1 111hh chaptel on The
House BeautIful h Lht pa'i'i111~ a\\a\ The pal10l h no
langei a sact ed apal tment 1 e'iel \ ed onh tOI 'itatl occa-
"lOn'i It has no\\ mel g ed 111to a 11\ing 100111 The )lotted
plant ha'i taken the place of the colOl 1e'i'-, \\ aA flO\\ el '-, r111-
broldenes 111"'lft tones ha\ e supel seded the hll:;11h l (,lUIeel
bdles and mats of eal1} memOl}
The fulfilment of the pUlpo"e \\ 111Lhhas gl OV\n out ot
thIS interest 111 \\ hat I'i knO\\ n a" dec01 at1\ e al t IS natm a1h
dependent upon the lIght g111dance Thus It IS essential that
one who £iuide'i shollld 111additIOn to a techl1lcal tlall1111g be
the pO"Se'i"Ol of cel tam tl alt'i , I efined taste good 1udg ement
an eye for COlOI PO\\ el of I ead} pel ceptlOn ohsel \ atlOn the
gIft of ahsorb1l1e, \\ hat he sees, and the art at aelaptll1t; thll1~"
to then pi oper places To one thll s eqlupped thel e un he no
f01 mula 111the successful furnl'ih111g of a home
TheIl" IS, howe\ el, a fundamental pI mClple \\ 111Chundel
all Cllcumstances should he ob"el \ ed It IS that o! "-lmphc1t\
The W01kel "houlel llndel'itand the tl ue "Ig l11hcanLe ot tIll ~
Pl111clple (f01 It IS often mlslmdel stood) \lmphuh mCcll1"
alway s \\ at kmg flom the foundatIOn If one Ldllles out thl"
Idea he \\ III be able to I eft am frum adopt1l1li \ a 1 j( HI~ pOIn t~
of \ teV\ and thlh \\ III ne\ el lo"c "Ight ot thc pl111UplL 1\ l11Lh
he \\lshes to demonstlate
To l11ustlclte thl'i pOlllt as leLlted to fl1lnItU1C let e\el\ -III
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1111ednc1 (Jll1dlllent be full of meanmg and thus avoid the errOl
(it 111lloduun~ c,upelfluolb details It I" not elab01ate calv111g
(11 llLh e,I1dlllli thdt IS leql1l"lte to make furniture beautIful.
I ht LLJitdt;t tdble \\ Ith perfect 11l1e'i and WIthout ornament
t,ple""es a "ense of beauty a" \\ell as fitne;,,, Again, a table
IlLhI \ cal \ ed and gtlded 111 accordance With some defined
]}Illluple 01 al t and placed amid appropnate surroundmgs
Lom e\ s aho a LOll espond111g Idea of beauty and simpltcity.
lobe able to hnng togethel such artIcles of furmtUt e
and O1namental obJecb a" are harmonIOus 111theIr construc-twn
and COl0l1112,f01 the pUt pose of furmshmg a room m an
applopllate mannel. and at the same time to Impart to It an
,111 ot comtOl t, can be accomphshed only by serious thought.
1 hout;ht \1 ell tounded gm ems Judgment and thus enables
one to be consIstent 1\Ian) WIsh to express in their furmsh-
1112s, II I1dt IS known, as 111dnIdual taste, but the average taste
among people l'i seldom trained and the matenaltzmg of that
untl amed mdl\ Idual ta"te shows too often the result of im-pul
"-e and doe"- not stand the test of tIme It IS well 111 en-decl\
01111e,to petftct any wOlk to entnt'it it to a person of
eApet lence
In plann1l1£i 111teilOi work one should always bear m
111111dthat the fUrl11tul e and accessOl te'i Will need to be lIyed
\\ Ith day b\ d,l\ The} ought therefOle to be of such a chal-
,1LtLl that thel1 u "efulne"s and mtet est \\ III be endunng. It
I" 10-;lLal that '-,uch results Lan neyel be attamed hy pursumg
undue ha"te 111the plann111g and executIOn of work. A thing
tha t h II 01tll \\ htle can ne\ el be hll1 ned
J [al monllJu '-, I esult" al e the bettet atta111ed when arch 1-
tCl t dllc1 deLOl alOl \\ 01k m U11l<,on Thts \\ ark should begin
\\ Ith the makmt; of plans Oftentnne" not the least part of
tht \\ OJ k 1'-, th e adapt1112, of old al d1ttectural features as well
A. PETERSEN &CO., CHiCAGO
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Our attention to every detail from carefully selected and matched lumber
to the fimshed product has given the Petersen Desk its Leadership.
SEND FOR CATALOGUE. FULL LINE. RIGHT PRICES.
MANUFACTURERS OF THE
BEST MADE and LEADING LINE of OFFICE DESKS
IN THE COUNTRY.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
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STAR CASTER CUP COMPANY
NORTH UNION STREET, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
(PATENT APPLIED FOR)
W" hav" adopt"d c"llulold as a bas" for our Cast"r Cups makmg th"
b"sl cUF on th" mark"t. C"llulOld IS a great Improv"m"nt over bases
mad" 0 oth"r matenal Wh"n It ISnt:eessary to move a pICC" support"d
by cups with C"llulOld bas"s It can h" don" wIth eas", as the bases are per
f"ctly smooth CellulOld does not sweat and by the US" of thes" cups
tabl"s ar" n"ver marr"d. These cups ar" finished m Gold"n Oak and
WhIte Maple, finlsh"d light If you will trl/ a sample order of the ..
good, 1/0Uwill deSIre to handle them In quantltlts
PRICES, SIZ" 2U mch"s $5.50 per hundred.
SIze Z).( mches 4.50 per hundred.
• fob Grand Rapids TRY A SAXPLE ORDER I'-------,-----~-----_._---------"
as decOJat ions and othel dLce""one" to the I equirements of
the modeln dwellmg The first step of the decoratOl IS to
consIder the permanent fittmgs of the apartment and thus
estabhsh a ba:Ol" If the fittmgs partake of strong archltect-t1lal
feature" then It IS well to allow these features to form the
dommant note of decoratIOn, and wIth which the furnIture
should accord.
TIllS harmony is well 11lustrated 111old Enghsh homes
One can doubtless recall some dwelling with ItS panelmg,
crO:o"beams and othet mterestmg wood\vork How admIrably
:oluted to such surroundmgs VI ere the well-chosen pIeces of
furl11ture, evel y one of whIch has Its O\'I> n mISSIon to fulfIll
Of the formal style:" that of the eIghteenth century
Flench i:, the most comple.x Its penods of tranSItion wele
by no means clearly defined Many of the decoratIve detaIls
of one penod bemg cat ned well 0\ er mto the retgn of the
'oucceedmg sovellgn, the duratIOn of the style m its punty wa"
comparatn ely short The \ allOUS permanent al chlteLtl11 al
teattu es of the colol11al l11tenor naturally afford a hallnomous
"ettm~ for contemporaneous sty les of f111niture
These style" seem well adapted under almost all clrcum-
"tance'o tor Amellcan needs It mIght almost be saId, when
in doubt use Colomal Of the Colomal era, the work of the
cdbmetmakers of the eIghteenth century IS ot chIef mtele"t
inasmuch as the four great "tyles produced m England dt1l-ing
that centllly form the type" most e.xten"l\ ely dra\vn Up011
for the Colol11al mtenor of today The great mastel s of that
tIme wele close "tudents of contempOlaneous Flench "ehen-iste"
" The fact, however, that the Em;lI"h artist" worked
almost exclusn ely 111maho~anv and WIthout abundant use
P' ,i1
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For Many Years Made ExclUSIVely by
C. CHRISTIANSEN, 2219 Grand Ave., CHICAGO
Also manufacturer of the ChIcago Truck for wood workIng factorJes
Send for Catalogue
The Good Old Reliable Workl Bench
THAT NEVER GETS OUT OF STYLE.
15
For
$9.25
we will
ship this
Dresser
in Satin
Walnut
or
Mahog.
any finish.
Chiffonier
to match.
Mail your
orders
promptly
to
CHAS. BENNETT FURNITURE CO.,
CHARLOTTE. MICH. ._ ..
of metal mount111gs "crves to make theIr furl1lture dlstmctlve.
The term "Colomal" 1" often mIsapplied to the mahogany
fUIl1lture of the fir"t quarter of the nmeteenth century. This
furnIture was adapted from thdt of the French empire and
although mtel estm~ IS not of "uffiClently dI"tmctlve type to
wall ant Its claSSIficatIon among the acknowledged :otyle". 1t
IS prec ursor of what 1" known as the cady Vlctonan.
In the selectIOn of furnIture and accessones one ",hould
Icmember that an artlcle whlch IS not first class IS dear at
any pI Ice At the same tIme laVIsh expendlture does not in-
"ure satI,,±actlOn After all IS saId concern111g house furn-
1',hmg let one Idea be pal amount, preserv e the atmosphcl C
of the home To most of us there comes hardly a sweetel
thought than that expre:,sed m the old EnglIsh couplet,
"East, ,Vest,
"Hame's best"
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16 WEEKLY ARTISAN
pue~'SHEO I!.VI!:RY SATURDAY lilY THI!'
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SUBSCRIPTION $1 00 PER YEAR ANYWHERE IN THE UNITED STATES
OTHER COUNTRIES $2 00 PER YEAR. SINGLE COPIES 5 CENTS.
PUBL.ICATION OFFICE. 108-112 NOPlTH DIVISION ST, GRAND RAP'IOS, M'CH
A 5 WHITE MANAGINQ EOITOA
Entered as second d .... matter July 5, 1909 s.t the post office at Grand RapId. MlchlKan
under the act of March 3 1879
CHICAGO REPRESENTATIVIE E LEVY
The general passenger agent of a raIlroad 1unnmg tl am5
to and from Grand Rapid" awaited a belated tlam at the
Union station and utte1 ed vv 01 ds not found m the Selmon on
the Mount "That mferndl one-armed si\lthchman alii ays
gives us the worst of It. \Ve are llmmnlS mOl e trams mto and
out of this station than all other use!,,, of thIs tel1111nal put
together, but our trains ale often delaved In the stup1dlt\ 01
the cupidIty of that one-a1 med Sil Itch tendcl OUI tJ am 110m
the northeast ha" been held up 111the) al d ten mmute:o "hlle
five outgoing trains have clea1ed the statIon Some ddY~-"
The passenger agent V\as called away at that moment
leaving the uncompleted sentence hangmg 1ll the aIr. The
man who had sympathetIcallv hstened to the compla111t at
the official decIded to make the acquamtance of the s" Itch
tender and when the 1ush of the hOUl had subsIded he ap-proached
the httle shanty Ul 'IIhlCh the tender spent his leh-ure
moments and was "oon seated m the httle 1oom. Cl~al:O
were produced and when the smoke filled the room the tender
was asked to explain the nature of 111swork "Every tram
for the east, south and west must pass 01 er my sIV1tches,
while entenng or leaving the statIon," he explained i. \nd
them engineers are a tricky lot '\ tram ma) clear the shed
at 12 o'clock and th1 ee 01 four more are scheduled to folIaI',
withm fiye minutes N umber one mOves toward the s" Itches
then the trains to follow WIll line up "lthout awaltmlS the "1~-
nal to start \iVhen the SWItches are th101v n the tl am::, 1u "h
through and cover the tracks out of the yards, blockmg and
delaying several trains that were entitled to the ri~ht of Yva)
into the station before the traim followmg number one al e
scheduled to leave. \Vhen the SWItches are set fOl one depal t-ing
train I am powerless to prevent others from U5mg the
tracks if they follow the first tram closely." The explanation
proved that the old man was ~uiltless of the charge preferred
against him by the passenlSer agent This incident StH.;-gests
several queries in regard to men enga~ ed Ul the tUlmtUl e
trade. Mr. RetaIler, please stand up and ans" e1 "In) OU1
busine% are you "eeking to improve your financIal COn(11-
tion, or are you SImply throwing the sV>ltches and enablmr:;
the manufacturel s to place their goods in the hands of the
public?" Mr. ManufactUl er, plea:oe an 5V\er Are you one of
those pesky engineers, ever alert and vevatchful to run your
train load of samples over the switches a few hours before
the day when the market opens and book the big ordelS whIle
your competitors are polishing their goods and making them
ready for the sample room? Mr Superintendent, please an-swer:
Are you sidetracked in the freight yards awaiting the
thl0wing of a SWItch that will open the field of opportunity
to )OU a" a manufacturer? How about it?
But httle atteni.lun IS paId by manufacturers of furniture
dnel k111d1cd gaud" to the etfOl b of federal consuls to estab-h:
oh a lall;er demand for good" manufactUled in the United
States It has been qUIte genelally supposed that 111times of
dullne..,s m the dome..,tIc markets the Amelican manufacturer
i\ ho had 1m ell;n mal kets f01 his products would be enabled
to keep hI'" factOl) m operatIOn, "hlle hb neighbor with only
a l1111ltcd lucal demand for hIS goods, would be compelled to
d05e hIS doOl:O or operate at a loss. It is a well-known fact
that a factor) operated for but one-half of ltS capaCIty is a
money losel '\ gentleman who has studied the question of
101el2,n markets f01 many years declares it to be a fact that
"hen there IS but a small demand for furnitu1 e at home, there
1:0httle or no demand for furnitUl e abroad. During the pal1lc
of 1907 he noted that our foreign shipments were of no con-sequence
in volume Panics, he declared. usually affr-ct the
\\ hole" orld of business. not merely communities or nations.
He adv Ises that co-operation with domestic merchants be es-tabh:
ohed for the purpose of eradicatmg the evils of ovel buy-
111lSand delay'i m the settlement of accounts Panics will
be of but short duration when these evils are abolished
"I f ) (IU Ii 111meet N 01 th Carolma pI ices T V\111gUdrdntee
to 'iell the output of yom factory 111the loop district of Chi-cac;
o," 1emarked the westel n "alesman of a large furniture
manufactunn~ company located 111WIsconsin, to the managel
"OUI pI ices are considerably higher than those of the manu-facturer'i
of N 01 th Carolina, but we have always sold our
output, ,mcl \\ hlk the trade of the loop dIstrict is desirable we
shall not try to compete with the North Carolina manufac-ture1"
in the matter of prices" The Wlsconsin man is doubly
blessed 111hIS make up He has sense and sand.
A. lot of dIscarded furniture was sold by the government
111y\ ash111~ton last week. As a considerable part of it was in
2, ood order, It WIll probably be 1evarnished and resold to the
~OI ernment 111the course of tIme That i'i the governmental
\\ a v of domg busmess
Encourage Christmas Shopping Now.
As "e approach the hohday season, we wish to impress
even fl1l nlture dealel "lth the advlSablhty of telling his cus-tume1"
to do Chl1'otmas buy mg early Even at thIS date it IS
nut out of season to 111folm the public that holiday lines are
dally bemg 1ecen ed, and are as yet unbroken.
Lay stress upon the fact that the cholCe of beautiful pres-ents
IS no\\ lalf;e, that alm05t anything the giver has in mind
Lan be found If he \\ 111come to your "tore early. Tell the
peuple that) ou have placed 111stock some furniture that is
e"peelal!) appropllate f01 Chnstmas gifts In many cases
\ OUI eady ~ales will be a forerunner of v" hat you may expect
la tel, v" hich ,,111 gOvern your orders to us accordmgly for
addltlOnal pIeces or SUIte", and WIll at the same time find our
0\\ n stoe k more complete.
ShO\\ ) our patrons that you are interested in them, and
the Ie"ults \\111 :ourpri"e you You have noth111g to lose, and
much to ga111 for a httle effort just at thIS time 'Ve are WIth
you at all tIme" to help you please your customers by quick
dehvenes of quahty goods -"Northern Furniture."
WEEKLY ARTISAN 17
EVANSVILL
Evansville, Otc. 27-The business of manufacturin~
furmture m E, ans, l11e has grail. n very rapidly in recent
years Old factones have been enla1ged and 1mproved and
new ones erected. It is predicted that the census statistics of
this year will show an increa'ied output of fifty per cent over
1900. In quantity and quality there has been a marked ad-
,ance, and the products which were considered, not so many
years ago suitable only for the cheapest trade in the southern
states, now sells readlly in all markets where high grade
work is preferred.
Among the progressive manufactUl ers of the city is the
Karges Furniture company which leads in the manufacture of
chamber furniture. "Mr. A. F. Karges, the head of this com
pany has devoted the greater part of his life to the develop-ment
of the great business the company has gained and is an
entel prising and progressive citizen. He is interested in
several lines of business outside of his furniture interests and
is a useful and \\ orthy citizen. He IS the president of the
National Furniture Manufacturers' association, serving h1S
second term.
Another live institution is the consolidated Globe-Bosse
World Furniture company organized by Benjamin F. Bosse,
A great vanety of cheap and medium priced furniture 1S
manufactured by this corporation Their manufrlcturing faCIl-ities
which are already very large, 1'1111 soon be greatly increa-wd
by the addltlOn of another factory, now under constructlOn
Chamber and dining room furnitUl e, kitchen cabinets and
wardrobes are manufactured. Associated with thi'i corpora-tion
are the Bockstege Furniture company, the A F Karge"l
Fur11lture company and the Metal Furniture company, form-ing
the BIG SIX ASSOCIATION, loaders of mixed goods 111
car lots.
The Eli D. Miller company are one of the small numbel
of manufacturers engaged in turning out folding beds, in the
United States. A few years ago factories making such beds
----_._--_.-._._. _. -_._. ... _... ._. - . .... yo • ..
I
._----------'I
IMPROVED, EASY AND EL EVATO RS QUICK RAISINC
Belt, ElectriC and Hand Power.
The Best Hand Power for Furmture Stores
Send for Catalogue and Prices.
KIMBALL BROS. CO., 1067 Ninth St.. Council Bluffs, la.
Kimball Elevator Co., 717Commerce Bldg , Kansas CIty,
Mo. J Peyton Hunter Terminal BldR. Dallas Texas,
Western Englneenng SpeCialtIes Co , Denver, Colo A-_-. ---•-_-_ -•-_-•_• .-------_.-._-
outnumbered those employed m several other branches of
the furniture manufactunng industry. The folding bed is a
useful article and II. hen it is properly constructed and is given
a fair trial by the owner it remains to please and satisfy and
without doubt the Miller beds are built much better than
some other beds, hence the company have had an easy market
for their product.
Manager Ploeger reports a good demand for the desks of
the Henderson Desk company.
A new catalogue has been issued by the Evansville Desk
company.
Palace Door Knockers and a Chippendale "Cat:'
There turned up in the hands of aNew York collector a
few day s ago a remarkable pair of palace door knockers, one
of those finds that on the one hand make one wonder how it
is possible stIll to obtain such things and on the other tend
to keep the collector's and would-be collector's hopes alive.
The knockers are of massive brass of a fine tone, worked in
the form of wild boar's heads, and the rings themselves are
magnificent in their :::.olidlty. It seems as though a blow of
one might wake the sleeping warder of a distant castle. The
knockers together look as though it would be WOl th one's
while to bulld doors around them.
Another object rarely seen these days which turned up
as a neighbor to the knockers was a mahogany Chippendale
"cat." These unusual objects of furniture which cannot be
tIpped over w1thout landing on their feet are curious enough
to be interesting, and they are also useful; but even those
more or less familiar II. ith old furniture hav~ not often seen
them.
.~----~------
I
,-.. .-.-.------_._. ----_._---_._._---_._--------------_.----_._-------- - .- .-- - . IIII
No. 550
Price $8.75
Palmer Manufadurin~
======(om~an~·======
1015 to 1043 Palmer Avenue,
DETROIT, MICH.
"'.. . . • •••••••• a_a ••• a_a.' __ ••••••••••••••
18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Too Rapid to Be True.
George F StlaHon, one of the contnhntOJ s of "husmess
stories" to the Saturday E, enmg Post tm n" out mnch good
stuff, but hIS belt must ha, e been I nnnmg over a loose pulle,
"hen he turned In the follo'Amg
Half a dozen years ago thel e \\ as a del k m one ot the
bIg department sto! es of Boston-m the fnl nltul e department
which was e, en wbdepartmentlzed TIll" del k \\ ho had
spent eIght} ears m the "chambel fUll11tm e ' \\ as dS 1..;e1en
about other c1a%es of furnltul e as he was about laces and em-hroidenes
HIS salary was-and had been tOl sn veal s-the
standardI7ed rate of fourteen dollal s \\ eekh I ha\ e ne\ el
heard what awakened hl111 hut he "uddenh :.;ot a de"l! e dnd
determInatIOn to l.;et furthCl than the 111tel pI etatwn 01 ,I -- __
pnce mark-K F D mto $389-f01 the mfol matlUn 01 dn
InquirIng customeJ He "tal ted on the "tud, 01 c dhmlt
making and desll..;nmg Def01 e long he hegdn to t ]dllllate
Iemark" to customel" ahout pelu1Jalltle" ot Ul11"tludlon 1111)]
tl""es, tenons do\etaJl" and L10""glam" \\hlch \el\ nll1ch
a"tOl1lsherl the depal tment dllef
One mOlning he was dIrected to go to the geneldl man
ag-er's office That gentleman opened the mtel \ le\\ h\ 1 e
mal kmf{ that he understood Oldham had some acquamtan(
wIth the construction of furniture. Oldham told him he h2l'
studIed that suhJect
"IYhat IS yom obJect)" mqul1ed the managel
contemplate gOl11g mto the manufactul e"
"Not at all, 'ilr; hut I feel that <Igood salesmdn ought t,)
be so familiar with hIS lIne a<.,to he ahle to ,,17e up at ol1le
any supenority of constl uctlOn as well as of deSIgn or fil1l"h
"If you were sent to a factor} to report on it<; operatIOns
Vv hat would you look at fil se" demanded the managel
"The lumber. I'd go into the yard and look at that and
then the dry kilns, and make sure they were using matenal
properly seasoned Then I'd--"
"That'll do," interrupted the manager "and y otdl do
Now I want you to go 0\ el to II enham and sta\ a te\\ da\ s
and report on the Vvell" Brothers' operatIOn<; lYe ale con
templating a contract to take theil entl! e output hut J feel
that we first ought to he sure that the equIpment and thel!
methods of manufactme ale allli~ht OUI o\\n leputatlOn
wIll be at stake."
Oldham went, made a \ erv complete and satlsfactOl v re-port,
and resumed hi<; loutine v, ork But six weeks latel he
was placed 111 a positIOn that had been Cleated f01 hIm-that
of traveling buyer of furnIture for the company HIS report
had shown the great value of knowmg and \\ atchm~ the
methods of puttmg furnIture together, and the change of Jobs
brought a substantial change of salary as well as an mdn Idu-
Do \ UU
••
THE WORLD'S BEST SAW BENCH
BUilt With double arbors, shdtng table and eqUIpped complete With taper pm
guages carefully graduated. Th:s machine represents the height In saw bench con-struction
It IS desIgned and bUIlt to reduce the cost of sawmg stock.
Write U8 for descriptive Information.
THE TANNEWITZ WORKS, ~ft:.gMPIDS.
altt \ ot po<.,ltlUn 1\\0 \ eal S latel he \\ as offered the superin-tendency
ot a plOgles"ne furmtlue factOly and accepted It It
\\ a" hh taml1l<U11\ \\ Ith retaIl methud..., and reqUlrement<;, as
\\ ell as hI" eduLdted taste m desH2,n and constructIOn, that
1l1(ltcated hh "\alue to! the new Joh '
lumpetent taltrJl\ supelmtendents can not be produced
111 h\ 0 \ eaJ" h\ suc h employment as Oldham 1:0 represented
to ha\ e had HIgher qualIhLatIOn<; than Oldham possessed
aJ e neles:oal") for "ucce"" In the furmtUl e manufactunng bUSI-ne""
Oldham ma, ha\ c "accepted" the supenntendency of
a tdctOl \, hut that fact IS nul of much Importance Did he
m<IKe good 0 II JItu ~tl atton doe" not supply mformatlOn
on th IS POUI t
WE MAKE REFRIGERATORS IN ALL SIZES AND STYLES
Zinc Lined. Porcelain Lined
White Enamel Lined, Opal-Glass Lmed
You can increase your Refrigerator Sales by putting III a
line of the "Alaskas."
Write for our handsome catalogue and price lists,
:•
WEEKLY ARTISAN 19
RICHMOND TABLET CHAIRS
Shippers May Select Routes.
Conditions governing the routing of freight have been
revolutionized by the new railroad law. It gives shippers
the pnvilege they did not pi eVlOusly have, of deslgnatmg m
writing the through route 0\ el which their busmess shall be
sent to destination. The caniers are therefore finding it to
No 1175 PRINCESS DRESSER
Made by Northern Furmture Co • Sheboygan, WIS,
in Oak. Mahogany, and Blrd's Eye Maple
theil mterest to estabhsh agencies m territories where they
have had no representation.
Some of them, notably those making up the larger sys-tems
between the East and vVest and the North and South,
were qlllte content to have the <'Ituation remain unchanged.
It meant territorial control that was more often paramount to
monopoly, and enabled them to dictate terms not only to their
connections, but al"o to shlppels The latter m paltlcular
were completely at their mercy m that regard, and to such an
extent that on the Pacific Coast bitter hostility and opposition
was provoked.
I t IS possible that this was m some measure responsible
for the law now m effect, which ehmmates this cause of antag-omsm
between the railroads and the shippers.
On the other hand loads that m a sense participated in
the combmatlOns which alOused the measure of hostility noted
mu"t now protect them"eh e", and may perhaps be greater
beneficianes than the) were under old methods and practices.
!\ttcntlOn called to the change indicates that northern lines
find that thev can now SOhClt t1 affic thlOughout the territory
south of the ::\fason and Dixon lme on a legitimately competi-t1\
e baSIS Without danger of bemg considered invaders, and
subjected to refusals The southern lines "Were practically a
umt a:::;amst them, and bmlt up such formidable barriers tho
It was Impossible to get a cel tain kmd of blhmess The old
OpP( rtumt\ fOI (hSCllmmatm~ a:::;-am"tthem IS gone, and like
the T'aLlhc Coa"t ,,11lppel" they \'\ ill he able to operate to bet-tel
ad\ anta:::;-e
Routing instl UCtlOns m hills of lading must now be
obey ed to the letter, and competmg carners have an even
chance With the sl1lpper The law IS very speCific and admits
of no questIOn or dispute a'3 t) tbe ll~hts of the shipper and
tl"e duty of the carnel
Bigness of Grand Rapids.
The ne\\ census gives Grand Rapid" a population of
112,S71, a e,am of 28 per cent m ten years The mere census
h:::;-ure"do not :::;-1e\ credit that IS due to that thriving furniture
center Grand Rapids can make more nOIse in the furniture
mart than many towns twice the size There are apparently
no dead ones dom:::;-busmess there Her manufacturers have
the hve Wire attachments and when there IS a possibility of
anything domg they straightway go and do It From every
\ 1ew pomt, cen"us mc1uded, It IS a good showing of live peo-ple
-Jamestown Index
VelY good, :\Ir Index man In legard to the population
of GI and Rapid" an explanatIOn IS timely and proper. The
Llty hm1ts l1d\ e not been extended since 1891. There IS a
lale,c populatIOn m the outSkl1 t<, of the clty-"just over the
lme" \Vhen those commumtle" "hall have been embraced by
the mumcipal COIporatlOn the httle old furmture town, to em-ploy
the words of a Pawnee chief, wdl be " a heap big bigger."
"SLIP SEATS"
AND THE
MOST SANITARY
RICHMOND CHAIR CO.
No. 100 DOUBLE CANE SEAT No. 100 GENUINE LEATHER SEAT
RICHMOND, IND.
20 WEEKLY ARTISAN
... . . ... ....--_._-_.--_._----- SHOPPED MERELY :FOR PLEASURE
Young Woman Who Sent Things Back Finally
Came to Grief.
A young" oman 'II ho Iud the ~llOjlP1l1£.;helblt U~l cl t i !.."
downtown and order t1ungs hum c!cpaltmellt "t01e~ II hUl
her father had cha1ge account::, \s d 1uk \\ hen the !..,I)()c!"
were dehvered at the house she mel ely opened the paekat:;es
looked the things over and then sent them back To be "UI e
there were some th111l;S that she kept, but not man)
Others in hel family remonstt a ted \\ lth hel ~a\ 111-.,('1 uu
oughtn't to do that It isn't fan to the StC)l~l;,-cepel" '1 ( U
waste their time and their money too having them send the11
dehvery wagon up this \lay when \ ou ha\ e not the least 111
tent10n of keeping half the stuff) ou O1del "
To which she was accustomed to 1eph "Tha t " all II!.., In
They have to send their wagons out an) \I a), and It Isn't am
particular trouble to them to cIeln er thmgs here ~\1ll1 ])e"H11"
I keep a really large percentage of 'Iv hat I orde1; more 111
fact, than other women I knO\\" '\nd hel reI a tt I es 'lh\ a \ ~
wound up by assurin~ he1 that the stOles \lould t:;et e\en \11th
her.
It came to pass, too One day \lhen ~he \Va" I)ut \11th
some friends at one of the st01 es she made a selce tll in ot ~omc
rather valuable goods, probably mOl e tOl "he1\\ dun !Ul am
other leason, and ha\111g 111m111d to 1etl11n them Lltu 1hen
she told the gitl "Charge those to \ccount \e) - - '
The girl sent down to see If that \I ould be all ll£.;ht ,mc1
then returned to the shopper with thIS messa~e . l hel e lsn t
any such account. It has been closed"
The shopper got vel}' an£;l v and told the UII tlMt \I a~
~'-------------- III
,III
II
~------
WABASH
INDIANA
"
It
I,
B. WALTER & CO.
Manufacture" 01 T ABLE SLIDES Exclusively
WRITE FOR PRICES AND DISCOUNT ...
dbSl11d ] hen ~he tu] c! hel to a"k if a mistake had not been
made and If the account 1eally were closed to dIscover what
the red"on was The gnl made further investtgation and then
JepOl ted "J t \'1 as too small and there were too many re-tl11n~,
~o the office decided it wasn't worth while running.
nC~Jde" It \I a"n't paId regularly."
The shoppe1, almost purple with anger had no recourse
but to lea\ e the place The f1iends she had with her sympa-tIll
zed of COUlse, but theIr amusement was thinly veiled.
TheJ e are not a few persons 111the cIty who have had
that "UJt ot e'CpeJ 1ence recently. The stores watch their ac-counb
mOl e closely than they did and if they see that the
charge Sy stem Isn't profItable, but really a loss on account of
tnne \'1 asted 111de!lve11es, they cut from the list the customer
concelned The) hay en't any particular desire to send out
(,ooeb to be 111speeted and retl11ned so often that they get into
the ~econd hand class.
\ gl cat deal dose1 tab IS kept on costs in the department
~tlJ1es ann\a\ than used to be the case. The strength of the
llimpeiltJOn has made it Imperative to cut prices down to a
plcH\ fine mal::;ln The 1esult IS that all the elements that
..'U to ail ed plOfi t ha \ e to be inspected closely.
The St01 es knO\\ that one great expense is in the delivery
"Cl VIce, and \\ hen one customer often returns goods without
any apparently \ ahd 1eason for doing so the store's interest
demand s a cm ta1lment of that priVIlege -N. Y. Sun.
To the Test!
Put Us
larity of your pet product. What you need
IS a stain specialist. Write Marietta.
Making special stains to fit special con-ditions
has been our special forte for years.
Weare more than manufacturers, we are
originators. Much of our paint is "custom
made," all of our stains are "mixed with
brains."
A furniture maker gets a new idea-a
"hunch." Designs a new line. It looks
good to him. It is good--distinctive--out
of the ordinary.
PROBLEM: What shall the finish be ~
What particular color and tone will dove-tail
with that particular design? Steady,
now; you've got a real gordian knot to un-tie.
Upon your success depends the popu- Address Desk NO.3.
Marietta Paint &. Color
Marietta, Ohio.
Co.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Group Your Dining Room Suites.
R W. Emelson in "Northeln FUr11ltUle"-Thele has
been a growmg demand the last few years for matched dmim;
room Stlltes and the questton allses how best to display them
on the dealer'Ol floor. On my last tnp I was in a store when
the dealer had a customer for a dmmg room suite, and he had
the dIfferent pIeces scattered around the store-buffet mane
place, chma closet m another, sel Vlhg- table m sttll another,
and the extensIOn table m another. He had to take the cus-tomer
through pI acttcally hIs enttre stock before the whole
sUlte was seen, and then to poor advantage, as the customer
became confused m trymg to keep the dIfferent pieces Ul mmd.
If that dealer had been up to date, and had had hIS dming
......--"BISHOP'S"-- ...
"THE QUALITY STORE"
lifre are Just a fe\ of the !'lplcudld bargams \\c .re offer~
mg m tluslugh grade Ime ot \hS'>lOll FUlllltmc
FOOT RE!;TS Mrth >300 $ 135
SMOKIJ- G TA BLbS Mrth ~v 00 350
('FLLARETTES "Orth *12 00 750
CHAIRS Mrth ~1300 775
ROCKERS worth $14 00 825
DLSKS "01th ~1500 1025
BOOI~CA SbS "orth ~2100 l4 50
COUCllFS Mltl ~24 00 1675
CLOCK;' Mrth ~16 00 2375
DA \ EJ- PORTS , orth $60 00 4250
OCTOBER SALE OF
Sample Mission Furniture
(SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY)
The<;e ue not our 101\cst nor our llghcst pnccd Plf'CE'S
" e ha\ e a wHle r<j.Dg'eof PllCf>S and 1-rf' confIdent that WI"
(aD please vou Posltne that" e can satlsi'\. "OU ar-.to qual
lty and COnVIllef' "I, ou that the go04s offered are the be"t '1ud
most dependable pIeces that can be made £01"the mone)
P rtur('s prIces samples of '" ood and If'atl er "'Ill be
gladlv maIled out of to\\n le'>Idltnts v.ho find It ImpossIble
to makf' U~a peThonal \ ISlt
Do Dot heSItate to come SImplY because VOll m~l\ not be
readv to bm You are equally \\elcome ab a \lsItor or
purchaser
BishopF umitureCompany
IONIA, CORNER LOUIS STREET
"Just on the Way to the UnIon Depot"
"Made in Grand RapIds"
loom sUltes grouped together 111a row, WIth a screen between
them, the customer would not only have been able to see at
a slance how the suite would look in the dining 100m at home,
but the dealel would have been able to sell the goods wlth
very much less trouble. The same idea would hold good in
bed room suites and hbrary suites. A great many sales of d111-
ing 100m suites have been made through a tasttly-atranged
show window. I am a great believer in attractive show W111-
dows, and in changing them at least once a week.
If any furniture dealer who has his dining- or beel 100111
stock scattered about the StOIe should I ead this bllef arttcle,
it may be the means of doing some ~ood 111the way of mak-ing
quicker sales.
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BEDS ARE BREAD AND
"ELI" FOLDING PROfIT WINNERS
No Stock complete WIthout the Elt Beds III Mantel and Upright.
ELI D. MILLER & CO.
EVANSVILLE. INDIANA
Write for cuts and pnces
ON SALE IN FURNITURE EXCHANCE, EVANSVILLE.
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I Palmer's Patent GluinJ! Clamps
I
The above cut IS taken direct from a photograph, and
shows the range of one SIze only, our No. I, 24-inch
Clamp. We make SIXother SIzes, taking in stock up to
60 IncheS wide and 2 lllches thick. Ours is the most
practICal method of clamping glued stock in use at the
present t,me. Hundreds of factories have adopted our
way the past year and hundreds more WIll in the future.
Let us show you. Let us send you the names of nearly
100 factones (only a fractIon of our llst) who have or-dered
and reordered many tImes. Proof positive our way
IS the best. A post card WIll brlllg it, catalog included.
Don't delay, but wrIte today.
A. E. PALMER & SONS, Owosso, MICH.
FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVES: The Projectile Co.,
London, England; Schuchardt & Schutte, BerlIn, Ger-many;
Alfred H. Schutte, Cologne, Pans, Brussels, LIege,
MIlan, TUrlll, Barcelona and Bl1boa. ~-- ........ -
2'1
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I UNION FURNITURE CO.
I ROCKFORD, ILL.
•I China Closets
I Buffets
•I Bookcases ,I
: We lead in Style, Conltrudton
• and FIDlSh. See our Catalogue. I Our hne on permanent exhlbl- I bon 3rd Floor, New Manulact-
I uren' BUlldlllll'Grand Rapid•• I I ~ .
22 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Those Missouri River Rates.
A'3 an effect of the SUPI eme COUIt decI,.,lol1 IUIUl ul
heIght rate~ went 111tOeffect 111a lalge "ectIOn of the n11ddle
we'3t on ThUlsday of thIs week, but there I" 110celta111t) tlldt
the lowel 1 ates wIll be made permanent, because the 01del
by whIch they V\ el e hxecl, nldkes them opel atn e 0111) until
November 10 \ftel that date the fight nM) be opened
aga111 and the IaIlI oad 'i ma) succeed aga111 111postpon111~ el
decI~IOn for a year 01 two Such actIOn IS not probable,
however. It IS genelally expected that the railloads hav111g
been beaten 111the Supleme COUlt \VIll contmue the rate'3
Made by Rockford Frame and FIxture Co , Rockford, III
fixed by the Interstate CommIssIOners, mdefillltely, or untIl
a change in conditIOns makes a revisIOn absolutely necessary.
A news dIspatch from \Vash111gton says'
"After fight111g an OJ der Issued by the Interstate Com-merce
CommIssIOn of August 25, 190~, the raIlroads have
decided to make operative rates whIch the CommIssion held
to be reasonable, and which the Supreme com t approved
recently.
"In the famous J\!IISSOUlIRn et rate cases complamt \Va,.,
made that the charges on shIpments from the \tlantIc sea-board
to points upon the Mlssoun RIver were unreasonable,
hif carrying the
ONE~PI[CE PORCELlIIN-LINED
~ONrIRD
CLERNRBLE
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE
GRAND RAPIDS REFRIGERATOR Cg
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
111that the ptOP01 t10n of the chalge flOm the seaboard to the
1[IS"OUlt Rnel \\as hlghel than rates to St Paul.
"The COmmI"'iIOn found that the lower rates to St. Paul
\\ ele lustIfiable becau'ie of watel competition, but held that
that pellt of the thtough late replesented by the charges from
III""t":otppl Rn el CroSS111gto the MIssouri were unreasonably
111[;h The CommIssIOn then named rates that it held to be
Ilel:oonable
'On c\U!;U'it 26, 1908, the CommissIOn stipulated that the
I educed rates should rema111 111fO!ce two years. The rail-toads
conte'ited The COmmtSSIOn subsequently changed the
d,lte from \\ hlch the t" 0 years' penod should run, so that it
\\ III e"pn e '\ ovember 10. 1910 \fter pa"smg through the
l (IUlt" up to the ,",upteme court, where the CommIssion was
'-,tbtd111ed. the raIlroad" have gn en notice that beginning
Octobel 26 the Iates fixed by the CommIssIon WIll be charged.
I he ne\\ tates "Ill be a matenal reduction.
fhe lates found to be unreasonable, but which the rail-wad"
hay e pet'itsted m charg111g the last two years, were 60
lcnb,..j.; cents, ::;3cents, 27 cents, and 22 cents per 100 pound".
I especttully, on fiISt, second, thIrd, fourth and fifth classes
h om the AtlantIC seaboard to Mlssoun RIver P0111tS
'The ne" 1ates whIch WIll be charged hereafter are
,1 cent" 38 cents 30 cenb, 23 cents and 19 cents, respectfully,
upon the dIfferent classes."
Plymouth. Wisconsin. Factories.
Plymouth, \iVIS , Oct 27-This is a fine little city located
'lbout htteen mIles \\ est of Sheboygan. It has good shipping
taulItIe:o-the ChIcago & ::-Jorthwestern and the Chicago,
IIIl\\ elukee & St Pdul lallroads
[hIS IS the home of the Plymouth Furlllture company,
the \\ estern Parlor Flame company and the Plymouth Chair
company , makers of the famous Plymouth rockers The new-e"
t one of these factones- The Western Parlor Frame com-pany-
ts hay mg all the OJ ders It can take care of. The man-al;
C1 ~[ L Reutel, 1':> a man of WIde expenence in this line,
hav111li been connected WIth some of the largest parlor frame
factotle:o 111 ChIcago -C M.
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A. L. HOLCOMB & CO.
Manufacturers of HIGH GRADE
OROOVINO SA WS
I DADO SAWS
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CItizens' Phone 1:139
27 N. Market St •• GraDd Rapid., Mlell.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 23
Sheboygan Factory Notes.
Sheboygan, \V1S . Oct 27 -The ~Teat chair town of vVis-cons1l1
i" glOw1l1f; Dy Uncle Sam'" la"t count it has over 26,-
000 1I1habltants, and at the present rate of increase will
probably have between 40,000 and 50,000 1111920 All of the
factOlies here ale cnJOY1l1ga £;ood husmess-very much bet-ter
than at this time last year.
The Sheboygan Novelty company al e having an except-lOnally
fine busme"s A great man} of the1r pIeces are just
m line for holiday p1esents, especlally the1r mahogany ladies'
desks, music cabinets, bookcases, etc. The main line which
they are preparing wlll be about 2S pel cent larger than the
present line, and will be the best they have ever produced.
George Sp1att & Co. are doing well Then line is com-pO'oed
of din1l1g room chalrs, wood seat and upholstered
rocker", children's chalrs and rockers. stools and office chairs,
S2""*' 'lL A INGLE 'OLL~R
Will Bring a New Stove or Range ~to Your Home~
And a "BUCK'S," Too.
A dollar the fint payment-the balance on eaaf weekly or monthly payments to SUlt your convemence-the
greatest .love offenng ever made In Grand Ra})lds.
Every BllCk. Stove IS eqwppecl With d.. tmctJve fuel aaYmg features that put them m 8. c.1M& by themaeIvea. They are lhe marvel of the
age, an co.t no morethan .ther mMe. We want you to _ them
MADE BY UNION LABOR
Three Rooms N: $190 4-Room Outfit $7.75
I
A Grand RapIds Sample
cane and cobbler seat cha1rs, and m fact about every kind of
cha1r that the fU1mture merchant could ask for.
The Sheboy~an Chan company 1t>havmg a good busi-ne..,..,
Theil catalogue 1'0one of the largest chalr catalogues
pubh"hed, and lS full of ~ood thmg'o.
The Poem" Chalr company lS also domg a large busi-ne..,..,.
PreSIdent Blackstock sa} s he IS gomg to butld another
vel y large wal ehouse next year.
The Northern Furll1ture company wlll show in Grand
Rapid" and Cll1cago 111 January, the best hne they have ever
offered the tr,tde. They have the largest furniture factory
in this country and they do an lmmense business. They have
gone mto the pubhsh111g business, lSetting out a house organ
entltled "Northern Furll1ture," which is full of illustrations
of the good things made by the Northern Furniture company
and also many good articles that will interest every furniture
!"DOETscii~~d'BAUERCO.
: 1534-44 Greenwood Terrace, CHICAGO
III
All previous efforts eclipsed
====== in our new hne of --,=o=c==c==== PARLOR FRAMES
which is larger and more effectIve than
we have yet offered
Now ready for inspection at our factory
Take Southport Ave car to Greenwood Terrace. thence west to factory.
or Clybourn Ave car to Ashland Ave. thence norlh to Greenwood Terrace. .. ._. ._ ..
dealer In this ls"ue of the Weekly Al ti"an we copy from
the October number, a well wntten article by R. W. Emer-son,
one of theIr '3ale"men in which he tells of a merchant
V\ ho had a customer that wanted a dming- room suite and
what a tlme he had to show it It is well worth reading, look
lt up-C M.
Crex Carpet Company Affairs.
Fmanclal World, New York-A high official in the Crex
Carpet Co told a COIrespondent of the Financial World this
week about the drastIC methods adopted at the time this
company succeeded to the busmess and the assets of the
American Grass TW111eCo, to put the company's affairs in
such shape that the stockholders would obtain some returns
upon thelr mvestment. The greater part of this information
has never been made public until now.
This offiCial stated, tHat from its very inception the Amer-
Ican Grass Twine Co was mlsmanaged. Those who were
then m control regarded the bus111ess as though it were their
own and they were not the custodians to whom was entrusted
the management for the benefit of the shareholders. Abnor-mal
salarles were pald for work others could do and would do
much better for less compensatlOn, and contracts were made
WIth salesmen whIch were unjustified. As a result, there
was nothmg left for the stockholders after these excessive
payments v" ere made.
The largest stockholders finally revolted and decided to
take the company out of the hands of the old management
and reorgall1ze the busmes~ on a sound basis. This was
effected by scalmg down the capltal from $15,000,000 to $3,-
000,000. Thls was done m 1908, and since that time semi-annual
d1Vldends of 25'i per cent have been pald on the stock.
All the old crowd have been ehmmated. Investigation
of the books of the old corporatlOn revealed the interesting
fact that the company had the habit of capitalizing future
llnagmary prospects and credltmg the charge to assets. About
$600,000 paid out illef;ally as dlvldends was recovered. All
dead weIght was ehmmated and the corporation, as the Crex
Carpet Co. began busmess on sound hnes. According to this
official the earnings of the corporatlOn were never better than
they are at present.
A Hole in the Wall.
is a poor thmg to keep the cold out or the heat in. If
you want to know why thlS exceedingly wise statement lS
made, just read the Grand Rapids Veneer Works "ad" in
this issue of the Weekly Artisan, that will explain it.
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24 WEEKLY ARTISAN
OLD ITEMS REPRINTED
Paragraphs Taken From the .Michigan Artisan
for September. 1883.
Nelson Lyon's furmture factory at Albany, N. Y., was
destroyed by fire recently.
The furmshlllgs of \V. K "Vandel bllt'S new manSlOn III
New York cost $3,000,000.
C H. Haberkorn & Co of DetrOlt, ha\ e commenced the
manufacture of patented castel s and sockets
Lams Hax, J 1. son of Loms Hax, the vetel an dealel m
furnIture in St Joseph, 110, \\ as \\ edded recenth to ;-'Ib--
Sallie M. Erwlll.
The Umon Chair \\ orks are manufactmlllc, cal pet and
cane seat lOckels III DetrOlt J R :\IcLaugh1111 b the mall-ager
of the company.
\i\' llllam A Berkey of Grand Rapids was appomted by the
goyernor, recently, one of the commlssionel s to 1epresent
Michigan at the Loulsvl1le eAposltlOll
Manufacturers are turmng out fifty pel cent mUle C,OllCJ:,
than the trade requires. ProductlOn must be I educed ut the
small and finanually weak manufacturel s will he tOlled 111t()
bankruptcy.
George B. Mattoun, the manufactmel at tmmtule III She-boygan,
Wis., recently pUIchased a safe, i\ hlch \\ as too Dig
for his office, so he \\ 111 Dudd a new office to hou..,e hh "ate
The country dealer who kicks agalllst the ne" 1ule tot
charglllg burlap to pm chasers of furniture has found a mal-ket
for his surplus matellal. It has been dlSCo\ el ed that bur-lap
is the nicest matenal Imaginable for the "alls of a house
How to Secure Trade in Italy.
Amelican Consul Charles M Caughy, j\Itlan, Ital) le-ports:
"Unfortunately Amencan wales do not obtam III thIS
country the foothold to \"hlCh they ale Ju"tl) entitled. but the
obstacles to trade extenslOn eXist not 111Ital), but 111the
United States. If, for eAample, a Gelman, a Flench, 01 a Bel-gian
manufacturer \\lshes to 111ttoduce IllS goods he "end" a
man who speaks the Italian language, fully equipped 111every
way for his work, and competent to eAplain mtelhgently all
the good qualities of the artIcle he wants to sell FI equently
an Amellcan WIth the same object III ,levy sends a catalogue
printed in English, WIth Amel ican weIghts, meaSUl e", and
prices. The re"ult is that the salesman finds hIS way mto the
good graces of the merchant, while the catalogue finds ItS
way into the waste basket. A pel sonal 1 epl esentatn e IS able
to bargam as to terms, sometimes gn mg as much as Sl"\.
months' cledlt, but the catalogue IS mexOlable, and e,en It
I"BEAVER," "GINDER ELLA," "DOCKASH"
STOVE HEADQUARTERS
"THE LINES THAT SELL" I NoleIMPERIAL BEAVER-one ofmany.
Best, They Stdnd the rest,"
THIS tS the IMPERIAL BEAVER. It is the finest cooking
range made anywhere In the world.
We thInk: so, and so WIll you when you see its advantages:
Study the above pIcture. The glass oven door is guaranteed
not to break. No heat lost when you look at your bakIng. This
range holds ItS heat longest, saves 250/0 in fuel, and has unusual hot
water capaCIty.
It ISthe best looking range built-and wear; as well as it looks.
Send for samples and see It-but we warn you that no other kind will
ever satlsty you agaIn, If you do I
W. D. SAG E R, 330-342No.Water St., CHICAGO
an llnportrr should be mclmed to give the American fIrm an
OJ del he 1'-, detelled b) the knowledge that the draft will
SUI cl} come by a fast steamer and the goods two months later
1n a slo'>\ frel[!,ht boat.
"\nothel method adopted by American exporters is that
ot tl) 111:;;to sell goods by direct correspondence with the re-tal1cl
s when the freight on a small package is prohibitive. If,
on the othel hand. an agent wel e established in Milan who
could canvass the Province, send m orders in large lots, and
dIstnbute the merchandise on its arrival to the different buy-et
'3, succe"s \\ ould meet such efforts. It is an undisputed fact
that e, el} Amellcan bouse represented here in this way does
a .:;aod hu,,111ess"
i" WADDELL- MA"NU-FACTURING CO:-l
Grand Rapids. Michigan
No-fium-Loose Fasteners
The largest manufacturers of Furniture Trimmings in Wood
in the world. Write us for Samples and Prices. Made in
Oak, Walnut, Mahogany, Birch and all Furniture Woods.
All Knobs and Pulls have the
.... . . .. _. ..... .. ..
The RelIable Furniture company, who have a string of
stores wIth their mam office m IndIanapolis, opened their
Detroit store, at 11-15 ,,;\Tashington boulevard, on October 20.
The Standard FurnIture company, wholesale and retail
dealer~ of Denver, Col., have just completed a fire proof ware-house,
50 x 125 feet, three stones and basement, at a cost of
$15,000
The Cal ey ChaIr company of Keene, N. H. has been in-corporated.
CapItal stock, $20,000, held mamly by Forrest L
cmd C. A. Carey, E. T. and J. C. Barcalow and PhIlip H.
Faulkner.
H. Gorpinkle & Co., otherwise known as the Beacon
Furniture company of Boston, Mass, have made an assign-ment.
They sold theIr stock in bulk to another Boston dealer
a few weeks ago.
";\T. 0 Dresser, who recently engaged in the retail furni-ture
trade at Tonopah, Nev, has succeeded so well that he
has made arrangements to erect a brick bUlldmg, 30 x 100 feet,
three stones, on upper Main street.
Meyer L Strauss has resigned the posItion of vice-presi-dent
of the Fort Wayne (Ind) Outfitters company, having
sold hIS mterest to Bennett Hollenstem, president and S. M.
Hollenstem, secretary and treasurer.
The retail furniture busmess of B. L Dodge, Akron, 0,
has been mcorporated by B L. Dodge, J. V. OlIver, G. S.
Goodman, Frank Crook and B H. Sebnng, under the name
of the Dodge company. Capital stock, $50,000.
Nathan Stroum, furniture dealer and proprietor of the
Stoughton Supply company of Boston, Mass, who went into
bankruptcy last June, has been sent to pnson for two years
for practicing fraud m the bankruptcy proceedings.
The Temple-Stewart Chair company of East Princeton,
Mass, who were burned out Iecently, have purchased the
Holman & Harns plant at Baldwmville, whIch has been idle
for two years, and WIll use it in the manufacture of wood seat
chairs.
A petition in bankruptcy has been filed against the H. C.
Swain company, fur11lture exporters of 59 Pearl street, New
York. LiabIlItIes estimated at $4,000 and assets at $800.
Mr. Swain V\ ho was preSIdent of the company resigned in
September.
As a window attraction the Atherton Furniture com-pany
of PIttsfield and other New England towns, are usmg
a Kmdel couch-bed, operated by an electric motor, connected,
also, with mecha11l~m that dIsplays SIgns callIng attentIOn to
the popular features of the bed.
By a senes of deals, between J. G. Peart and ,,;\Tillard &
Schmidt of Belvidere, Ill, and the ";\T. C. Gunn company of
Fort Scott, Kan~ Mr Peart becomes sole owner of the
fur11ltUle and undertakmg busmess heretofore conducted by
"VIllard & SchmIdt at Belvidere.
vValter E Olson, proprietor of the Olson Rug company
of ChIcago, has just awarded contracts for the construction
of a new factory bUlldmg to be erected at the northwest cor-ner
of Laflm and Monroe streets. The buIldmg will be 75
by 125 feet, five stories and basement, and will be constructed
of the type known as modern mill. The estimated cost is
$60,000.
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
George Stewart has purchased the furnIture store of H.
C. Chnstenson at VIborg, Neb.
E. E. Hayden succeeds P. M. Englehart in the retail
furniture busmess at Waubay, S. Dak.
The chaIr factory at MunsonvIlle, N. H., which has been
idle smce June, has resumed operatIOns.
C. T. Krogh has purchased the retaIl furniture business
of Hald & Wmchester, Danneberg, Neb.
The undertaking firm of LIlly & Newton, Des Moines,
Ia, has been dIssolved, Joseph LIlly retiring.
The Olins Fur11lture company of Cambridge, Mass, have
opened a branch store at 234-6 Providence, R 1.
M. Bernstein succeeds hIS uncle, L. Bernstein, in the re-tail
furniture trade at 1602 South street, PhIladelphia.
The Allegan (MIch.) Fur11lture company, manufacturers,
have increased their capItal stock flom $15,000 to $30,000.
The firm of Landkamer Bros & Davidson, undertakers
of Mankato, Minn , has been dIssolved, Mr. Davidson retiring.
The assets of the Chicago Store and Office Furniture
company of Seattle, ,,;\T ash, are in the hands of Raymond C.
Wright, as receiver.
J. M. Bntton & Co.- J. M. Bntton and Moss Harrison-have
purchased the fur11lture and undertaking business of T.
W. Britton at Columbus, Ga.
C. R. Parish & Co, furniture dealers on High street,
Columbus, 0., have opened a branch store at the corner of
Lorain and West Broad streets.
Joseph Dyer of FaIrfield, Me, has invented and patented
a mltenng machine, which IS said to have been highly ap-proved
by all who have used It.
The Coffin-Rundstrom Furniture company, dealers of
North Yakima, Wash, are to have a new bUlldmg, 50x 140
feet, three stones and basement.
Mr. Warns has retIred from the Schuster-Warns-Damer-ath
company, table manufacturers, MIlwaukee, \Vis., having
sold hIS interest to Joseph Mertz.
Rowlands & Co., fur11ltUle dealers of ZanesvIlle, 0., have
purchased the Cooper furniture store m Mansfield, O. They
WIll continue busmess in both places.
B. Lowenstein & Bros., incorporated, have opened a
furniture and carpet department on the fifth floor of the
general store buildmg in Memphis, Tenn.
E. W. Felch, chair manufacturer of Keene, N. H., has
purchased the "Villiams factory buildings in Brattleboro, Vt.,
and WIll move his plant to the latter CIty.
E. "V. Osborne, furniture dealer of SomervIlle, Mass., has
sold out to vVIllIam Caldwell of East Cambndge, who WIll
take possessIOn of the store on November 1.
A balcony ten feet WIde and 150 feet long has been con-structed
in the Miller Fur11lture company's store at Athens,
Ga. It WIll be used for the dIsplay of chairs.
F. A. Alexander, furniture dealer, of Bellmgham, Wash.,
has sold out to ";\T. C. and H. R. Knaack who will continue
the busmess under the name of Knaack Brothers.
At a special town meetmg the electors of Peterboro, N.
H, voted to exempt from taxatIOn the property of the Phenix
Chair company, who are establI~hmg a factory in that town.
Isaac E. Palmer has been granted a patent on a head or
shoulder rest for couches and hammocks and has assigne~
his rights to the 1. E. Palmer company of Middletown, Conn.
GIve your customer "swell front" values If you would
retain his trade.
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Most Attractive Inducements for Car Load Buyers
Are Offered by the
THE KARGES FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Chamber SUites, Wardrobes. Chlffomers. Odd Dressers. Chifforobes
THE BOSSE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of KItchen Cabinets. K D. Wardrobes, Cupboards and Safes, In ImItation
golden oak, plain oak and quartered oak.
THE WORLD FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Mantel and Upright Folding Beds, Buffets, Hall Trees, Chma Closets,
Combination Book and Library Cases.
THE GLOBE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of SIdeboards in plam oak, imitation quartered oak, and sohd quartered oak,
Chamber Suites, Odd Dressers, Beds and ChIffoniers in 1ffiitatlOnquartered oak, irqitation
mahogany, and imitation golden oak.
THE BOCKSTEGE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of the "Superior" Line of Parlor, Library, Dining and Dressing Tables.
THE METAL FURNITURE CO. Made by The Karges Furniture Co
Manufacturers of "Hygiene" Guaranteed Brass and Iron Beds, Cnbs, Wire Spnngs and Cots
Evansville is the great mixed car loading center of the
United States, made so by the Big Six Association .
• •
WEEKLY ARTISAN 27
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Made by Bosse Furtnture Company. Made by World Furtulute Company
• ••• _._ ••••• _ •••••• , ••••••••••••••••••• a •••• • __ •••••• a ••• _
Made by Bockstege Furmture Co
h--. - •.••.
28 WEEKLY ARTISAN
FURNITURE MANUFACTURERS
ATTENTION!
Send for .ampl.,. of our
Celebrated Nickel Steel
Sword Tempered
BAND SAW BLADES
Warranted In every particular
Best proPosition on the market.
FRANK. W. SWETT & SON
Mfr' of band saw blad•• and 1001,
1717 1719 W Adams St ,Chlcage
Visited Friends in ChicaJio.
Chicago, October 27 -Once in a \\ hIle C :\1 on 11l~
rounds stop off for a day m Chicago. Just to see some ot hI'>
old tIme fnends and acquamtances, but on thiS till' he q\\
only a few Lyman R Lathrop, plesldent ot the 1411 com-pany
was found busIly engaged m d1ctatmg letters to hi"
stenographer. Mr. Lathrop 1S cheerful and happy He antI-cipates
a fine sea 'ion m January, 1911, and 1S confident that
all of the space m the big bUlldmg \vIII be taken
Mr. Johnson, secretal y of the :\IanufactUl el ,,' E"\.hlblt1on
BUlldmg company, 1319 M1ch1gan avenue, \\a,., al"o btb\ at
h1S desk, but always ha" tIme to spend a few m111ute-. \\ Ith
an old t1me fnend M1 Jackson \\a" 111the be~t ot "p11lh
He says "1319" 1'i all rented for JanUal), and e\ el \ th111~ 1"
lovely in Ch1cago except the Cubs But the) \\ t11 In e till oUlih
it.
Mr. Meyers, president of the company of \\ h1ch ::VIr.J ack-son
1S secretary, came m from the ball grounds, happy III
everythlllg but the fate of the Cubs
The writer went to the Seng Co. to see Frank Seng, but
Frank was away, out at Albuquerque, New :\Ie"\.lco He 1-.
gomg to V1S1tthe Grand Canyon of ColOlado. plobabl) to pla,,-
ter 1t ove1 w1th p1ctures of the Duo-,.,t) Ie loch the '-,en~
rocker spnng'i and other things he ddve1 the,., III 'Good Fn-tI1res"
Frank 1S a good deal Itke late P T Bal num, \\ ho
'ia1d he "did not care v\hat the papel s said about him, If the)
only sa1d somethmg," but Frank has It on Ba1 num, for no
one was ever heard to say anythmg about h1111except that
which was good.
Everybody knows Adolph Goidstelll, and evelybody calls
him "Goldy." "Veil. "what's the matter With Goldy?" He
has assoc1ated hUllself With the Fish FUI nlture com pan) and
has taken hold of the11 maIl order department, and IS bU'iIly at
work on a new catalogue Success to "Goldy" fOI he de-serves
it -c. M
New Furniture Dealers.
HaIry & Co., al e new furlllture dealer" at \h lll, Tex.
August Kalass has opened a new furllltUle :'ltole, dt \\'e"t
Allts, \;\TIS
M. J. Shapiro, has opened a new furlllture StOle at Bay-onne,
N. J.
M. Cohen & Son are new furlllturc dealers at 171 Fssex
street, New York.
The Welch Furlllture company have opened their nevv
store III Bluefield, W. Va.
Dav1d Pava ha'i opened a new furlllture and carpet store
at 2053 Third avenue, New York
D. Bernstem of Memph1s, Tenn., has made arrangements
to open a new furniture store at Clarkdale, :MISS
The St. Loms Furlllture company are new dealers at
Ada, Okla. M. Goldwasser IS the principal propnetor.
B r Stevenson of Ashland, Va, is president of the
Eto\\ ah Furllltlll e and Carpet company, capitalized at $10,-
000, \\ho have Ju"t opened a new store at Gadsden, Ala.
Plllltp Gaus IS a ne" furlllture dealer under the name of
the Ea'it Cambndge Furlllture company, East Cambndge,
:\Ias"
J E York, Thomas Plllgry, Crleene Thompson and C.
J Tyre, have lllcorporated the York Furmture company,
capltalt7ed at $10,000, to open a new store at Durant, Okla.
P \\ , Geot~e A and GeOlge E McLean and E. F. Val-en
tllle, have lllCOlporated the Office Supply and Furniture
companv to open a new store III Little Rock, Ark. Capital
:-.tock, $10,000.
Postponed Till After Election.
1h the con"tltutIOn, or by-Iaw'i, the date for the semi-annual
meetm~ of the XatIOnal Association of Furmture
\Ianutactul el 'i l'i fixed on November 8, but as that i,., the date
for the general electIOns the meetlllg has been postponed
for a \\ eek The meetlllg Will be held at the Jefferson Hotel
III St Lot1l'>, 110, on November 15 and 16 The program
\\ hlLh \\ III be all ang ed by the executlYe committee on Tues-day
mOlnmg {(member 15, w111cons1st mainly of heanng and
dhcu"-'111~ I epOl to, of committees, the only formal number so
tal announced, bemg an addre'is on "Glue" by J. F. WIlliams
ot BO'iton. :\Ia-,,., The I eport of the commIttee on cost sched-ule
\\ 111be a 1'1ommen t featm e of the program. I t is ex-pected
to call out con 'ildel able discussIOn. Another import-ant
and mtere'itmg repO! t Will be presented by the committee
appomted at the prey IOU,>meet111g to co-operate with the rail-road
c1asslficatlOn committees III an effort to secure the adop-tlOn
of umform c1as'ilficatIOn rules.
Lehigh Orders Steel Coaches.
\n 01 del fot 40 all-"teel vestIbule passenger coaches has
been placed \\ Ith the Pullman company, by the LehIgh Valley
Rallt oad company They are to be deltvered III March and
'\1'111 of next yeal and wlll be put 111tOserV1ce at once. The
need at the new eqUlpment has grown out of the increased
traffic on the LehIgh, seveldl Ilev\ trai'l~ IJaving been added
III the last fe~ month~ In the future the company wtll fol-low
the poltcy of havmg all its new passenger cars of fireproof
f--- .... - . ------.. -1 We Manufacture the
L,,"e.t LlDe of
Folding
I Chairs
I
II
IIIIII
,~_._----------------------~
In the Umted States,
SUItable for Sun day
Schools, Hall,. Steam-ers
and all pub1Jcresorts
We also manufacture
Brass Tnmmed I ran
Beds, Spnng Beds, Cots
and CrIbs In a large
vanety
Send for Catalogue
and P"ces to
KAUffMAN
MfG. CO.
ASHLAND, OHIO ..I.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 29
By E. Levy, Representative.
Chicago, Oct. 28-LoUIS F Nonnast, the well-known table
manufacturer of thIS CIty returned home last week from a tour
m Europe, where he VIsIted hIS natIve home, besIdes travel-trade
in theIr new convertible dIvan bed, they have been
and wItnessing the PassIOn play. M1. Nonnast returns fee1-
mg much benefitted by hIS vacatIOn. He found hIS tnp so
enjoyable that he contemplates another the coming year. He
agrees wIth the many other thousands of European tourists,
among whom are many who went back to ViSIt the place of
theIr bIrth, that It IS a fine thmg to travel abroad enjoying
the beautIes of scenery and the pIcturesque and hlstoncal old
towns, but that thIS IS "God's Country" for those who wIll
WOlk and who seek faVOls from Dame Fortune It 1seven
hinted that he tned a tnp in a flymg machIne of the Count
ZeppelIn type, but of that Mr Nonna~t dId not hlm~elf speak.
The advance in the price of Im~eed oIl whIch largely
enters Into the manufacture of wood filler, and other wood
finishmg supplIes, has oblIged the manufacturers of wood
finIshing supplies to raIse their prices. Mr Wm. HulIn of
the Chicago Wood Fmishmg company says "ThIs has been
found absolutely imperative If we are to continue to manu-facture,
as on the old basis of prices it would be operatmg at
a loss \Ve stood out against thIS action as long as possible
but all the producers in thIS lIne had to do the same In order
to make a profit. Weare m hopes raw materials have
reached the lImit of cost and that there wIll be no necessIty
to make a further advance in prices, but we feel we must
keep up the standard of our product and furnish the same
quality that has secured and retained our bUSIness, and m
order to do this we have had to advance our pnces a lIttle."
Freedman Rros. & Co., 717 Mather street have leased
from the school board of the CIty, the bUIldIng which is at
the rear of theIr factory. It contains about 30,000 squal e feet
of space, which will be fitted up and put into shape for theIr
espeCIal use. They wIll erect a bndge to join the two struc-tures
whIch when the new premIses are occupIed wIlli afford
them about 50 per cent addItIOnal space. WIth their growing
trade m theIr new convertible dlVan bed, they hav~ been
crowded for room, and this added space wIll greatly reheve
the congested condItIOn of their factory.
The NIemann Table company, 76th street and Cottage
Grove avenue, have all theIr new patterns now ready for the
ensuing season and are arrangmg for their new catalogue,
whIch wIll be pushed to completion with all pOSSIble speed.
They produce a large Ime of dmIng and lIbrary tables and
theIr catalogues are replete WIth good thIngs in the various
grades.
Jay C. Hills of the Peck & HIlls Furmture company has
gone on an extended trip to the coast, stopping for about a
week In Denver, to look over theIr new warehouse In which
they carr) stock for the adjacent terrItory. HIS famIly pre-ceded
hIm some time ago and are In San Francisco, where
he wIll sojourn with them untIl about the first of January
when he wIll return to Chicago in time for the mIdwinter
selling season.
vVIlham Patch of the Blackwill & Patch Furniture com-pany
wIll be one of the manufacturers from Chicago in at-tendance
at the meeting of the National Furniture Manufac-turers'
aSSOCIation, whIch wIll be held III St. Louis, Mo., on
November 15 and 16 Mr. Patch says they have had a rec-ord-
breakIng busmess thIS season and expresses hImself as
much pleased at the plospects for a contInuance of theIr
prospenty.
Isaac Koch of the Koch FurnIture company who shows
a number of lInes at 1411 MIchigan avenue has rented ware-houses
at 277 Canal street, New York CIty, which he has
stocked WIth goods from hIS varIOUS factOrIes, and wIll here
after make that CIty his headqual ters, comIng here occaSIOn-ally
to look after his busIne~s at thIS end.
New Factories.
A. J. and C. E. Peugh have Olganized the Sunflower
Cabinet company to bUIld a factory and manufacture kItchen
cabInets at HutchInson, Kan.
The UnIted Upholstery company, who have plants in
New York CIty, Newark, N. J., and PhIladelphIa, have lo-cated
another on Congress Square, New Haven, Conn.
The Lyons FoldIng Waldrobe company of Muskegon,
Mlch , incorporated WIth $20,000 capItal stock to manufacture
a sanItary wardrobe Invented by H D. Lyons, wIll begin
bUSIness soon in the plant formerly u"ed by the Muskegon
Carving Works.
The Glengarry Upholstenng company, capitalized at $20,-
000, are bUIldIng a plant at Glengarry, Wexford county,
Mich. They wIll em poly about SIxty hands, manufacturing
chairs and couches.
Everett M. Waterhouse, promoter of the Goose Fair
Furniture company whIch proposed to establIsh a large fac-tory
at Saco, Me, has transferred the base of hIS efforts to
Bangor, same state, the Saco board of trade having faIled to
offer the bonus that he desired.
The trustees of the Central Manufacturing District, Chi-cago,
are about to erect for the J. L. Metz FurnIture company
what wIll be one of the largest buildIngs yet constructed in
the dIstrict. It will be six stories and basement, of heavy
mIll construction, wIll occupy a lot 80 x 160 feet and wIll cost
$90,000.
Furniture Fires.
Edward Lewis, furniture dealer of Chicago, lost a few
hundred dollars by fire in his warehouse at 1813 West Thirty-fourth
street. Fully insured.
WIlliam Piton of, second hand furnIture dealer of Ells-worth
street, Dorchester, Mass, was burned out for the sec-ond
time WIthIn a year, on October 20. No msurance.
" ..-- . ..
HOFFMAN BROTHERS CO.
FT. WAYNE, IND.
HARDWOOD LUMBER
I SA~~D} QUARTERED OAK { VEN EERS SLICED AND MAHOGANY
.. T ••••••• T ••• •• •
30 WEEKLY ARTISAN
---------------------- ---.
III
III
II
I
II
I
...._~_.-~------------------.- --_._----- ,------
FOUR NEW
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
PRODUCTIONS
The Ad-el-ite People
BARONIAL OAK STAIN
FLANDERS OAK STAIN
S M 0 K ED 0 A K S T A I N
EARLY ENGLISH OAK STAIN
in acid and oil.
in aGidand oiL
in acid and oil,
in acid and oil.
Send for finished samples, free.
Ad-el-ite FIllers and Stams have long held first place in the estimation
of Furniture Manufacturers and Master Painters. In addition to the reg-ular
colors the above shades offer unusually beautiful and novel effects.
CHICAGO-NEW YORK
.- Everythmg m Pamt SpecIalties and Wood FIlllshmg materIals, FIllers that fIll" Stams that satisfy
Buildings That Will Need Furuiture.
Residences- PhIladelphIa Pa -, \ Illtam ]' I[ nLlldl
Broad sbeet and ~e\ent)-hht a\cnne, SROOO Tulm lUlhc.tt
ShelbUlne and Le\lck 'itleeb $3 :;00, C.reon"e B,lnu 1-1-1;
North ThIrty -first 'itreet, $3,000, lII'i II al \ Clal k \UlU Il an
'itreet and TabOI lOad $-1-000 ])1 If T Ka 1 pell" l h c.ltcn
a\enne and Ilayne '-beet.--- S-1-;OOO TLul\ r 1 llehc.lu ell
mantown a\ enne and (Tl a\ el 'i lane St) 100
Los '\ngele'i,Cal-\ ~ Dlml111lk l327'\c,tLle\lnth
~treet, $2,500; C II II d"on 2:;1 ITnc.hon a\ enne S2 ;00, T
A. Jennmgs, Thud a\enne and [\\dfth 'itled StOOG, ILu\
GIbson, 2301 ~cal f "tl eet 82 ;00, l I Tubel man Dakota
street and PlOspect a\ cnne, ~4 71;, ~Il" LCll d. '-, IIale 921
Lexmgton a\enne, $2,;00, D Dlako" 1;22 J d,t \Jl1th ,tleet
S3,000
1\Itnneapoh'i, '!'lImn --'\lbel t II I elandel 260() Sl'-.th
~treei, $2,;00, John :\1 Carle;on 227 1\ est Ilfth ::,bcet $5,-
000, Challe'i Pearson, :;4:; ~Ibley stI eet, $3 :;00 rmll F
Hneske, 1688 Lamel a\enne, $4,000, J Pattel"on 1979 'C11l-
\ et'3ity avenue, $3,000, 1,lank -'\ubm, 59-1-Selb\ a\ enne, S3 000
Troy, )J. Y -ChaJ1e~ H (.raldnel head \)t rOld d\ U1nc
$4,000; F. IY -'\cked, 676 L1l1dcn a \ enne S3 ;00 r 1all \ f
Calhoun, 219 GUlley a\ ennc, $2, ;00
San Dle£;o, Cal -l\II'i" J l'dl tlld£', e, I ,md '-,e\ cn teemh
'-treets, $5,000, F S ndll LevYI'i dnd Randolph ~tl eeh S3-
000; 111'i E r Eckhal d, :lIan land and" ,m Bl1l ell ~il cd~,
$2, :;00, 11\\ m Ua"pI1l, Band [II entv "l'-.th "11cc h :-;2 ;00
DetlOlt, J\Ilch -\, t1ham (Tealln~, 13;0 Champlam a\ e-nue,
$2,ROO, George \ Holste1l1, 518 Flm\\ ood a\ enne S4,-
000; Adolph ~ommel ; I aft 'itred '52900 I' R "te\\ al t 26
Chandlel sheet, $8,000, \' Elh"al Gentle\ -1-2\\ L"tlllml"tel
street, $4,000, Ra, mond R RO~Cl" 40 (hape sit eet, SR,OOO
\\ altcl " \ l\lCl "elond and
- Date Created:
- 1910-10-29T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 31:18
- Subject Topic:
- Periodicals and Furniture Industry
- Language:
- English
- Rights:
- © Grand Rapids Public Library. All Rights Reserved.
- URL:
- http://cdm16055.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16055coll20/id/60